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Forum Noob batteries in series question
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  • State Verified Answer
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  • batteries
  • series
  • 18650
  • dc
  • parallel
Related

Noob batteries in series question

moderategamer
moderategamer over 6 years ago

I was wondering, if I wire for example 2 2700ma batteries in series to get roughly  8.4 v cell fully charged but use a step down convertor to bring the voltage down to 5v do I gain back any of the capacity between the two cells? Ideally I would want to wire in parallel for the project but unfortunately I need to draw up to 3.7ish V which would become impossible as the batteries discharge. I'm new here so please go easy on me I'm trying to do as much reading as I can but would appreciate the help.

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Top Replies

  • gecoz
    gecoz over 6 years ago +2 verified
    Hi Steven, The short answer to your question is no, with the batteries in series the max capacity you can aim for is the original capacity of the single battery, if they are identical, otherwise the capacity…
  • Jan Cumps
    Jan Cumps over 6 years ago in reply to michaelkellett +2 suggested
    yes. at least with the buck converter way less energy will be wasted as heat compared to the linear FET. With a buck-boost converter, Steven would also be able to get some more energy out of the cell when…
  • gecoz
    gecoz over 6 years ago in reply to moderategamer +1 suggested
    Hi Steven, If I understand your question correctly, you are asking why, if the nominal voltage of the battery if 4.2V, I read a voltage of 3-3.7V once the battery is connected to the circuit. The battery…
Parents
  • gecoz
    0 gecoz over 6 years ago

    Hi Steven,

     

    The short answer to your question is no, with the batteries in series the max capacity you can aim for is the original capacity of the single battery, if they are identical, otherwise the capacity of the resulting battery would be equal to the lowest capacity.

     

    Generally speaking, if you use higher voltage to power up your load you end up drawing more current from the battery, hence making it discharge faster. If you imagine the device you are powering up with the battery as a simple resistor (approximation), and think about Ohm's law (V = R * I), you can understand why this happens: your load would stay constant, so if you increase the voltage (V), the current draw increases too, so that R remain constant.

     

    If you are planning to use the battery in parallel instead, to increase the capacity, just make sure the 2 batteries are identical (or as identical as they can be), otherwise they won't be balanced, which will lead to one of them eventually failing.

     

    I hope it helps,

     

    Fabio

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  • moderategamer
    0 moderategamer over 6 years ago in reply to gecoz

    Thanks for the reply Fabio, my project uses a Mosfet to control the resulting voltage I'm just a bit confused as to where all the extra voltage is going. if the resistance of the coil I'm using remains constant and the voltage I'm effectively supplying is around 3-3.7v am I conserving power at all. sorry I'm very new to electronics programming is more my deal.

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  • shabaz
    0 shabaz over 6 years ago in reply to moderategamer

    Out of curiosity I looked for the datasheet, but it doesn't exist at that website I think.

    The website link has a very brief specification only (it barely deserves the name 'specification'):

    image

    At a minimum, this is what specifications should look like:

    http://www.farnell.com/datasheets/2608759.pdf

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  • michaelkellett
    0 michaelkellett over 6 years ago in reply to shabaz

    Last night I had a quick browse of Vapers "Mods" - astoundingly bad engineering practice seems common.

     

    Many of the home brew things are built by people who obviously have almost no understanding of how the parts work.

     

    Some of the commercial offerings look quite slick from outside but there are no proper specs.

     

    I suspect that a lot of the 200W style claims are a bit like those made for matchbox sized loudspeakers.

     

    Some of the designs just put 2 biggish cylindrical Li batteries in series with a button operated switch to connect them across a heater coil (of uncertain resistance). Often a MOSFET is used to buffer the button switch.

    IRLB3034 seems popular.

     

    The better commercial designs have temperature control based on the heater resistance.

     

    MK

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  • moderategamer
    0 moderategamer over 6 years ago in reply to michaelkellett

    Yes there are certainly a lot of very unsafe diy mods but I can assure you legitimate commercial mods are very safe and have to follow the strictest guidelines and be approved. I use joytech and relaux mods which are both fantastic mods that are very safe.

     

    I aim to do this as safely as possible something I think is very achievable given I take my time and do it right.

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  • shabaz
    0 shabaz over 6 years ago in reply to michaelkellett

    I'm tempted to raise with trading standards, that these batteries are being sold with wording that they are 'authorised for use with vape devices' because that suggests some approval.

    image

    I cannot find on the Molicel website where they specify that these cells can be used for vape devices: Molicel High Power Lithium Ion –Power Tool, Electric Vehicle, Solar Power

    So it would be good if they can check they really are recommended by the manufacturer (even though 'authorised' suggests some standard approval/authority!!).

     

    Some manufacturers of similar sized cells explicitly say they do not recommend for use with vape devices, e.g. this PDF doc from LG Chem: https://nkon.nl/sk/k/m36.pdf

    states:

    image

    Also they state the minimum they expect in battery packs, otherwise they will not accept any liability:

    image

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  • moderategamer
    0 moderategamer over 6 years ago in reply to shabaz

    Calm down dude first off these cells are authorised for use in vaping devices and in the UK at least the law is very strict around vaping goods. Yes the site doesn't list the full data sheet, they are a trusted source for the best fully tested cells however if you need the full data sheet all you need do is email them like I did and they will happily provide you with the full manufacturers specification pdf. I would supply you with it but this forum doesn't allow for attachments.

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  • michaelkellett
    0 michaelkellett over 6 years ago in reply to moderategamer

    You can attach indirectly by adding a link, I use a free Dropbox account for such things.

     

    I'm interested in Shabaz's info because it shows that it is expected that battery pack designs would need two faults to fail, and the system would then need three faults to a fire.

     

    The only design I have with a biggish (2.6AH) lithium battery uses a protected battery and poly fuse protection against shorts. I used a complete charge/load management chip.

     

    In the vaping application I don't think you could use protected batteries because of the very high currents.

     

    MK

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  • moderategamer
    0 moderategamer over 6 years ago in reply to michaelkellett

    Is this mosfet suitable for drain current of up to 20A max actuall drain more like 15A max?

    https://www.sparkfun.com/datasheets/Components/General/RFP30N06LE.pdf

    https://www.amazon.co.uk/Cylewet-RFP30N06LE-0-047Ohm-N-Channel-Arduino/dp/B071VXRQYR/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1552636322&s…

     

    I can link the datasheet for the 18650 cell if you want but I can assure you it can handle the load.

     

    I plan on using this fuse to protect the battery from over current or short circuit do you think it is suitable?

    https://uk.rs-online.com/web/p/products/7032795/

     

    I found this buck boost convertor designed for e-gigs/vapouriser was concidering using it, It's texas instruments so bound to be good, they supply the full spec sheet and also the full circuit diagram.

    PMP20327 Variable Outputs 2-Cell Battery 200W Heater Element Power Stage Buck Boost Reference Design | TI.com

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  • michaelkellett
    0 michaelkellett over 6 years ago in reply to moderategamer

    At 15A the MOSFET will dissipate 15 * 15 * .047  = 10.6W

    At 20A it will be 18.8W - it will get hot - at 20A about 25% of the power is going into the MOSFET - so it's not a good choice.

     

    From the graph that fuse will take 1 minute to blow at a current of 50A.

    From the Sony VTC5A battery data sheet:

     

    If the over 35A discharge occur, the allowable time of operating over current protection

    comply with the below table.

    35Aを超える放電が発生する場合、過電流保護作動までの許容時間は下記表に従うこと

    Discharge current

    放電電流

    35~40A

    ~60A

    ~80A

    ~100A

    Time

    時間

    <78sec.

    <26sec.

    <14sec.

    <6.7sec

     

    Interpolating it looks as if the fuse will not save you if the current is around 50A - that fuse is no good for this application.

     

    To get a current of 50A you would need the fault load on the battery to be about 0,064R (including its own internal resistance) - this is a figure that is quite likely to happen unless you very carefully design against it.

     

    With regard to the TI regulator - do you have the experience to design a board to implement that circuit - it is a seriously non-trivial thing to do.

     

    I hate to say it but I think you are way out of your depth here -  if I were asked to design this thing and put my name on it being safe, I'd expect at least three board spins and a the job the take several months.

     

    For example I would probably go for three levels of fusing - electronic current limiting/power monitoring (possibly dual system with fault tolerance), current sensitive fuse and a thermal fuse.

     

    MK

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  • moderategamer
    0 moderategamer over 6 years ago in reply to michaelkellett

    I ordered this inductor for my buck boost convertor

    https://katalog.we-online.com/pbs/datasheet/744355147.pdf

    https://www.we-online.de/redexpert/#/module/4/infopanels/LIT/mea/30C/productdata/=744355147/type/Single/Ir/gte:28.5A/Isat/gte:34.2A/L/gte:462nH+lte:858nH/applicationbar/SepicConverter/on/input/3V+4V+5V/output/5V+20A/chip/250kHz/inductor/l1+40/diode/0.7V

     

    how do I choose a suitable capacitor?

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  • moderategamer
    0 moderategamer over 6 years ago in reply to michaelkellett

    Do you have any recommendations for logic level mosfets? I will say you have to remember that's for constant drain which is classed 10 seconds or more whereas for my application you're talking short burst of about 2 seconds.

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  • moderategamer
    0 moderategamer over 6 years ago in reply to michaelkellett

    Do you have any recommendations for logic level mosfets? I will say you have to remember that's for constant drain which is classed 10 seconds or more whereas for my application you're talking short burst of about 2 seconds.

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  • michaelkellett
    0 michaelkellett over 6 years ago in reply to moderategamer

    Hello Steven,

     

    I don't think I can help you any more. Design is a holistic thing - you need to consider everything at once. If you use a switching converter you don't need a switch MOSFET to connect the load, just turn the switcher on and off.

    If you want a recommendation for the MOSFETs in the switching supply - use the ones TI suggest.

    If you want to use a the MOSFET as a simple switch for the load then  you will struggle to find one specified for on-resistance at 3V gate drive with the high current and low resistance that you require. If you have two cells in series you would have 6V available - but a whole new set of safety problems.

     

    If you really want to do this why not get radical - after all you can just go out and buy a vaper that does what you expect.

     

    Now a mains powered vaper may sound counter intuitive safety-wise but it isn't.

    Isolating transformers are well understood and cheap, if you connect the vaper to the power pack with a suitable bit of wire you can use a high resistance coil (4 ohms needs only 7.07A for 200W). There is no energy storage in the vaper - so it's no longer like putting an unexploded bomb in your mouth. You just need to make sure that the vaper doesn't get too hot and that the power can't stay on for long. Of course others have thought of this and you can just go out an buy one.

     

    MK

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  • moderategamer
    0 moderategamer over 6 years ago in reply to michaelkellett

    Fair enough, Thanks for the help you provided. I don't want to mess around with AC power but I will do much more research before I take the project any further for the time being I am simply brainstorming and tinkering. I'm setting up the circuit to test but will not be putting it under load until I'm confident it is safe to an acceptable standard.

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