Electrical – Charging 3P pack of 18650 batteries using a single TP4056, and protection standards

batteriesbattery-chargingcircuit-protection

For a project at uni, I'm trying to learn to work with 18650s and TP4056s. One of the tasks is to be able to USB-charge three 18650s (Panasonic NCR, 3350 mAh each) in parallel, whilst also being able to draw current from the batteries (not when charging; we already have a switching circuit to separate charging and discharging automatically, but this is besides my question).

After days of research, it seems to me that over various forums, people are split on the use of multiple batteries and possibly multiple TP4056 in this regard. I've seen people recommending for and against the use of each of the following three scenarios:

  • One TP4056 with a 3P parallel pack;
  • Three TP4056s in parallel with each having one battery;
  • Three TP4056s in a series/parallel configuration with the first having a 3P pack.

This is an example of people approving the first, this is an example of someone approving the second, and this is what I mean by the third configuration.

All these seem conflicting to me, and so I'm wondering which is considered bogus, and which is considered good practice. Personally, I'm most inclined to go with the first approach, since I don't see why a TP4056 would treat three (balanced) batteries differently from a single battery with triple the single-battery capacity. A diagram of this proposal – not including switching mechanisms as mentioned since those are not fundamental to the question at hand, and therefore assuming the TP's OUT will never be outputting anything when there is current flowing into the IN – is found all the way at the bottom.

I was also told it'd be bad to connect the inputs of three TP4056s in parallel to one USB breakout board, and I don't know what's up with that (I'd be fine in using diodes, if current flowing in and out of the modules would somehow be the problem). This would of course not be an issue with my proposed way of doing things, but it would be for the other two methods.

Furthermore – notify me if this requires me to open a separate question -, this SE thread's accepted answer advises that one connect a protective DW01A in between TP4056s and batteries, but as far as I know, that exact circuit is already present on the TP4056 itself. I have read about there being TP4056s on the market with and without protective circuitry, and I'm thinking this might be what that SE thread is referencing, but I might be wrong about this. Any extra thoughts on this last point appreciated.

Edit: Added diagram. I forgot to add that the charging time is of little importance.

Best Answer

There is no conflicts with any examples.

  • parallel operation is to boost currents by sharing
  • series to charge 1 card to 1 battery from a higher voltage.
  • arrays to combine both above

  • You can use as many cards in parallel as long as do not exceed the source current limit.

  • Each card has a Rprog to set say for 0.5A or 1A and USB charger hubs often support 2.4A per port such as 6 ganged ports with 60W max which are low cost.(eg Blackweb)

  • However charging and discharging simultaneously requires independent Ibat and Ichg sensing so battery current can be cutoff while charging the load directly.

  • this is to prevent cooking the battery at 4.2V CHRG drives the load draws more the 5%CC used for battery cutoff.

  • The TP4056 uses a high side FET switch to regulate battery current

  • the DW01 balancer disconnects charge discharge FETs on the low side

  • so you need to consider how to regulate both output ports ( Bat. and load) independently and have flow control from both voltage sources. (Charger and Bat.)

So draw a block diagram / wiring schematic and define all interfaces specs for voltage and current and see what needs to be done with parallel load and battery charge to prevent the above failure when current sharing.

I.load + I.bat < I.charge.max.
If > > I.charge.max, reduce I.bat then if still > Icharge, disconnect load

Consider;

  • priority is given to external load unless faulted or overload on hard start.
  • charge service to battery is 2nd priority.
  • Gang as many batteries in parallel as long as you know charger capacity
  • 5V Molex has more current capacity than USB ports
  • loads are responsible for protecting / regulating themselves
  • supplies are responsible for protecting themselves
  • chargers are assumed dumb otherwise and just responsible for regulating voltage @ some I max.
  • ICL’s (NTC) at Digikey may be used as a soft start
  • PTC’s may be used a fuses
  • limit the time spent with 4.2V on Battery to reduce aging is another option for cutoff with some timer in minutes