Jon.boston said:
I'm looking at connecting three battery packs in parallel to get more
current carying capability. If each battery has a maximum current
draw of 4 amps is there a standard circuit to use to help with current
sharing? I'm worried that all the current will come from the pack
with the higher voltage.
I'm looking at getting something like 9 Amps from the three packs in
parallel?
Battery packs are li-ion with saftey circuits.
Thanks,
Jon
LiIon cells are routinely hooked directly in parallel inside laptop
battery packs. Seems to work ok as long as they're matched.
So, what's your definition of "parallel"? If they're hard-wired,
you shouldn't have any trouble if you start with matched cells.
If you have swappable packs that can be inserted in any state of
charge, your problem is isolation more than sharing. You have to
add some (variable) voltage drop to the highest voltage pack so that
it delivers only 3A at the voltage of the lowest pack. You don't have
a lot of headroom between the 3A and 4A numbers. The most important
spec might be the internal resistance of the cell pack (over it's
lifetime). Every bad Lithium laptop pack I've seen has failed due to
high internal cell resistance. If you want long battery life, you need
to make sure your circuit will work with lots of battery internal
resistance. Diodes may provide isolation, but may not provide enough
resistance to keep the max A/pack below 4A (over the useful life of the
pack).
And you have the same problem charging. Have to keep the max charge
current below the max rating at each cell. May be an issue for
high rate charging.
What are you doing to keep the temperatures down? I've dissected
several laptop packs. Seems that there's often only one pair of dead
cells. They're the ones nearest the hot part of the laptop. So, even
if you start with matched packs, they may not stay that way for long.
Where did the 4 amp max current come from? The 75% of the ABSOLUTE
maximum number may be horrible for cell life. A pair of 18650s is
typically used in a laptop that idles at 800mA or so. Even then, life
ain't that great.
Sure would be nice to start with bigger cells.
mike
--
Return address is VALID.
Bunch of stuff For Sale and Wanted at the link below.
Toshiba & Compaq LiIon Batteries, Test Equipment
Honda CB-125S $800 in PDX
TEK Sampling Sweep Plugin and RM564
Tek 2465 $800, ham radio, 30pS pulser
Tektronix Concept Books, spot welding head...
http://www.geocities.com/SiliconValley/Monitor/4710/