Electrical – keep Li-Ion battery ‘charging’ continuously at 3.7 V

batteriesbattery-chargingbattery-chemistrylithium ion

I have built a Raspberry Pi NAS and it is powered by a lithium-ion battery through a 5 V step-up module – the one used in powerbanks. The battery is a 18650 Li-Ion battery which is kept continuously at 3.7 V by an adjusted LM2596 module.

I am not directly powering the Pi through a 5 V mobile charger because of two reasons – brownouts and blackouts will cause the NAS to reboot. Second, no cheap-ish mobile charger's output is free from AC ripples and Y-cap leakages, which might shorten the life of the Pi. And it'll be overkill to buy a well-constructed Apple charger that's fairly foolproof.

Now, I was wondering, is it harmful for the lithium-ion battery to be kept at 3.7 V? Does it cause continuous trickle charging, that is harmful for lithium-ion batteries? Or does the battery take zero current once it's at 3.7 V?

The circuit is like this:

circuit diagram!

Best Answer

does the battery take zero current once it's at 3.7 V?

Yes. Or to be more precise, once the battery voltage reaches the regulated power supply voltage the charge current will reduce exponentially until it reaches the battery's leakage current (which is very low).

Can I keep Li-Ion battery 'charging' continuously at 3.7 V?

Yes, you can do that. But the battery will only be charged to ~10% of its rated capacity.

Apart from the obvious capacity issue, this could be a big problem if the power supply input is removed and the battery is not switched out of circuit soon after. If the battery drops below 2.5 V it will be permanently damaged and won't charge. When you reconnect power the LM2596 will try to charge it with up to 3 A of current, which could damage it if the voltage is below 3.0 V. Trying to charge a damaged Li-ion battery at high current may cause it to explode!

Bottom line: for safety and to prevent damaging the battery you should use a proper li-ion charger which is designed to 'float' the battery while powering the load. Here's an example:-

2.5A Single Cell Switch Mode Battery Charger with Power Path Management

enter image description here

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