Best way to manage this LFP house battery
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With reference to the following graph I think the best way to charge to say 90% if you using a generator or some other charger that has a CC output is to set the CV point to the voltage where the voltage reaches 90%SOC at whatever current you are charging at and terminate the charge immediately it reaches the set charge voltage with no absorb/CV charging. With these cells and a charge rate of ~0.2C this would equate to a CV point of ~3.45V/cell. This method will not work with any consistently if you are charging from solar or the charger doesn't charge at a constant current or for low charge rates. One good reason for not having any CV charging when charging from a generator is the extra generator runtime necessary to charge during the absorb phase.
I am not a fan of running an LFP battery without an individual cell BMS mainly because of unforeseen stuffups and the very real chance of a fault within a cell reducing its capacity which could easily lead to it being overcharged and outside its safe operating zone.
How often do you intend to redo the bottom balance?
I know there are (unmonitored) bottom-balanced LFP packs staying very well balanced after several years in the field, so I have been assuming (hoping) that mine would behave similarly.
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a) I'm aware of that inclination.
b) My counter can reset on any number of criteria, so I'll just have it detect the end of a generator- or shore-based CC charge cycle.
c) I'm really only using the SOC as a convenience value. I believe I will tie all the real decisioning to voltage (and temperature, in an emergency).
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If I end up having to wire up 112 cells of monitoring, that's preferable to having a system fully down while trying to live in it on the road. However, my premise is that I don't need much monitoring. So far I see no indication that I need that, but it will take time and imbalance observation to know for sure.
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All I'm saying when putting them in CV the current will be defined by CC output CV voltage and battery voltage difference divided by those 23 mOhm. Or your charge controller max output current making it actually CC. If controller is powerful enough it is very easy to screw up unless the cells are already on their upper knee where they can increase their voltage to compensate.
I don't quite follow this paragraph. Can you explain for me?. If your cells are still on their 'flat' part of the curve they won't easily let go the voltage up either so the current in the circuit will be defined by (Ucc_out - Ubatt) / Rinternal. In your case (54V - 48V) / 0.023 = 260A due to very low resistance of the cells. Either your fuse will blow or CC will limit its output current to its rated max (and consequently decreasing its voltage) making it essentially Constant Current at max rated value but something has to give. I slightly exaggerated values (by lowering Ubatt) to illustrate the point. If you improve your connections 23mOhm can become 16x0.3 + say 5 mOhm of wires = 10mOhm making these voltage mismatches even more pronounced as in the same example it would lead to 600A current.
Last edited by max2k; 09-19-2017, 04:40 PM.Comment
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And then, I make that case here, but I reserve the right to be proven wrong!
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LFP cells don't seem to drift out of balance easily, there was no evidence of that happening if one doesn't try to push them to >95% C capacity swing. On the contrary owners seem to have their systems operational for years without doing anything to get them in balance.
as OP also noted having one 1/7 of the system down is better than having all of it there.Comment
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The charger starts in CC: it feeds in energy at a fixed rate and observes voltage. Since potential monotonically increases with charge, we can set an arbitrary voltage where we ask the charger to switch to CV.
When the cells reach that specified voltage, the charger then decreases current to maintain the requested voltage. As the pack continues to charge, its ability to accept current at the given voltage goes down, and the charger continuously adjusts its output, down.
I'm not aware of a scenario where the charger would ever be increasing its current in any meaningful way during a CV charge, as long as the battery is behaving normally.
Does that sound about right to you all?
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If it's okay with you, I'm just going to stop right here on your first sentence, because I don't understand it. I also don't understand much of the rest of your paragraph, but let's go one step at a time to make it easier on me.
The charger starts in CC: it feeds in energy at a fixed rate and observes voltage. Since potential monotonically increases with charge, we can set an arbitrary voltage where we ask the charger to switch to CV.
When the cells reach that specified voltage, the charger then decreases current to maintain the requested voltage. As the pack continues to charge, its ability to accept current at the given voltage goes down, and the charger continuously adjusts its output, down.
I'm not aware of a scenario where the charger would ever be increasing its current in any meaningful way during a CV charge, as long as the battery is behaving normally.
Does that sound about right to you all?Last edited by max2k; 09-19-2017, 05:36 PM.Comment
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If the cells are stable with respect to each other in a nominal sense, then real-time complete monitoring seems like overkill.
I really like simple with critical systems.
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My point is that I don't expect my cells to deteriorate fast enough to merit a real-time monitoring system. I suspect simply an occasional, manual check will provide nearly as much insurance against a rogue cell without the downsides of a rats' nest of monitor wiring and yet another black box I have to trust to work well.
I'm not sure why you think my meter has any draw of any significance, but in any event I was referring to the load demanded by a monitoring system.
By the way, the odds of my shorting a cell by hand with my meter are close to zero: my probes are about 2mm long. I would argue no one should be working atop a pile of high-energy devices with any low-resistance conductor that is long with respect to the spacing. I bet you would, too.
Well, cells are stable until they're not. My system is bottom balanced to within .01 volts of each other. Once the average cell reaches about 3.35 volts, cell 13 gets to 3.65 volts very quickly (minutes.) So I keep the max voltage much lower than 3.35*16. That will work until cell 13 declines a little more, then it won't work any more.
So, what have you settled on for your voltage? (And how much decline have you observed in cell 13?)
Simple is great. But there's a reason all EV batteries use BMSes - and it's not because they are cheap or foolproof.
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Last edited by max2k; 09-19-2017, 08:10 PM.Comment
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It is not showing up for me either. This has happened to me before, nebster, I suggest you try to delete and reload your picture onto the Solar Panel website
Simon
Off-Grid LFP(LiFePO4) system since April 2013Comment
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Okay, here's another attempt at the same attachment. Let's see if it works better.
Screen Shot 2017-09-19 at 1.08.11 AM.jpgComment
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