Just a note to add a bit of quite recent detail to Lithium charging..

A symposium for reliability engineers and product safety engineers earlier
this year discussed some recent findings that trickle-charging lithium
chemistries can cause cobalt (and other things depending on exact design)
to migrate and form nodules on the surface and and then potentially
mechanically puncturing their dielectric and after which some nice
exothermic reactions can/may/might/will occur.

This failure mode has been found (and others), but they are still trying to
figure out why some will exhibit this behavior easily and some (from the
same batch) may do not do so as readily. Many other charge/discharge things
which make fire were discussed for which there are (AFAIK) no "controller
solutions" for... yet. Lots of variables in manufacturing, materials,
designs and chemistry and a number of metallurgical variations.

This symposium was attended by one of my engineers (who also presented),
and he came back with lots of interesting and depressing issues WRT Lithium
batteries... depressing since we are in the middle of a project involving
this stuff and have had to tell the principles the bad news about the
direction safety certifications are going with Lithiums. We are still
trying to work out a safe path for getting our project done and out the
door (Certified packs and chargers? Deep due diligence in design,? Buy more
insurance?). Not quite sure what the legal ramifications are since we are
now aware of these issues, but the issues have no engineering direction for
solution yet, and  meanwhile Lithium continues to march along without
slowdown nor action...

Just thought I would pass-on this very recent development, especially since
hobby electronics design issues have been mentioned by several engineers in
this arena as being an additional safety concern... not sure what direction
this will eventually go.

FWIW,
Doug


On Mon, Jul 14, 2014 at 10:10 AM, <[email protected]> wrote:

> Yeah, I use a MAX8903G myself. It has all those features and also has
> "smart selector technology", which gives the charger intellegence on when
> to store and release energy. I would like to cover that in the workshop too.
>
> Isaac
>
>  -------- Original Message --------
> Subject: Re: [dorkbotpdx-blabber] Lithium-Ion USB Charger Workshop Idea
> From: [email protected]
> Date: Mon, July 14, 2014 9:34 am
> To: [email protected]
>
> I would strongly recommend you make sure you understand the relationship
> between voltage-mode and constant current mode when working with Li+
> chargers.  A common booboo happens when the current flow into a Li+ cell
> decreases as the charging cycle is nearing completion, and is not detected
> within some reasonable amount of time, which causes over-charging.  That
> would be an (ahem) exothermic reaction phase.  Think of the news stories
> about early Apple lapbooks catching fire, which was largely caused by a
> slow current sense switch in the charger.  When you feel you switch has
> reached the inflection point of current load vs cell potential, then a
> current limiter needs to be switched-in to keep the cell in low-current
> trickle charge.  If you want to roll your own controller for that would be
> fine, but it is important to realize that the charging curve would have to
> be recharacterized each time you change from one Li+ cell manufacturer to
> another.  Or try to have some kind of self-servoing current sense amplifier
> somewhere on the load.  Another thing that is fun to do (I mean that) is
> figuring out how to switch MOSFET's so that a load can remain connected to
> the cell even when the charging source (USB) is disconnected (or
> reconnected to charge up the cell).  Make sure, in that case, that you have
> an output L-C filter on the load-side to squelch the switching transients
> from the charger.  I had to design in all these things in my Blivit charger
> system, but did not have the real-estate to do it all in discrete
> elements.  I opted for the simple way to do it with a Maxim part as the
> control element for the charger (MAX1874).
>
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