I have recently taken delivery of a set of 40 NiFe batteries (400 A-hr capacity), to construct a 48V battery bank for use in conjunction with a Xantrex XW6048 system. I'm trying to figure out how to perform the initial charge of these batteries, since (as most of you probably know) they come dry and without any charge. The XW system is actually powered by batteries, so I cannot use that system with the NiFe until the NiFe batteries have an initial charge of at least ~40 V or so.
I am considering performing the initial charge by directly connecting the battery bank to one of my PV arrays. The array consists of 4 parallel strings of 3 modules in series; the modules are KD210GX-LPU, and altogether the array has I_sc~34 A and V_oc~99 V. I realize that the open circuit voltage is way too high for this battery bank, but based on a post on another thread by Mike, I understand that solar panels act like a current source, and so the delivered voltage should automatically equal the battery voltage (0V right now, but will rise as it charges) and just pump the ~30 A into the batteries.
Naively, I am thinking that as long as I watch the battery voltage and do not let it exceed ~50V, this should be safe? Of course I would only leave the system hooked up in this way during the daytime on a sunny day. [Otherwise, I guess I need a blocking diode?]
Is this a sensible approach??
I would greatly appreciate any advice from all of you experts!!!
Thanks,
Ben (a renewable newbie)
I am considering performing the initial charge by directly connecting the battery bank to one of my PV arrays. The array consists of 4 parallel strings of 3 modules in series; the modules are KD210GX-LPU, and altogether the array has I_sc~34 A and V_oc~99 V. I realize that the open circuit voltage is way too high for this battery bank, but based on a post on another thread by Mike, I understand that solar panels act like a current source, and so the delivered voltage should automatically equal the battery voltage (0V right now, but will rise as it charges) and just pump the ~30 A into the batteries.
Naively, I am thinking that as long as I watch the battery voltage and do not let it exceed ~50V, this should be safe? Of course I would only leave the system hooked up in this way during the daytime on a sunny day. [Otherwise, I guess I need a blocking diode?]
Is this a sensible approach??
I would greatly appreciate any advice from all of you experts!!!
Thanks,
Ben (a renewable newbie)
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