Electronic – Can we do better than CCCV charging

batteriesbattery-charginglithium ion

For some background, most if not all modern charging solutions for lithium ion batteries use a CCCV model for charging:

CCCV Charging

As the diagram explains, we charge at a constant current, and then "suddenly" switch into a constant voltage mode. This "sudden" transition seems unnatural, and feels like it's more likely to be related to simpler electrical design for chargers rather than "better" charging.

So my question is, are there other charging models? For example:

  • Could the charger stay at CC for longer and go above the target voltage, and jump into a CV mode at the target voltage, leading to a quicker charge?
  • I've heard it leads to a lower battery life if batteries are fast charged near 100% of their capacity, could the CC mode start ramping down earlier as the battery gets full?

EDIT: The existing answers have prompted me to do some more research and I've found:

  • My two suggestions for improvements were indeed "silly", but I had found other alternatives, such as CP-CV charging (constant power, constant voltage).
  • Temperature is a big killer – there are charging techniques that vary the current during the CC phase to keep within temperature bounds. This allows them to use a higher base current.
  • This is a fantastic article that also details the chemistry: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590116819300116

Best Answer

The modes you are describing are little bit opposite.

we charge at a constant voltage, and then "suddenly" switch into a constant current mode.

  • First Pre-charging happens(Constant voltage)
  • Majority of power is fed through constant Current
  • When battery voltage reaches specified voltage level, it shifts to Constant voltage charging method(Tickle-charge).

First Pre-charging happens(Constant voltage), then majority of power is fed through constant Current and then when battery voltage reaches specified voltage level, it shifts to Constant voltage charging method.

So answering your questions:

  • All this process is related chemical composition which after researches came up with this kind of charging for the maximum life and utilization of the battery. You can do as you said, but it may lead to lower life of battery.
  • CC at near 100% capacity: What happens is that at near 70-80%, internal resistance of the battery comes into the picture, since at high CC mode would mean drop in the resistance to be same, but the internal voltage of the battery is increasing causing the terminal voltage to increase and we don't want that to happen beyond certain limit. So your charger would automatically shift from Constant current to constant voltage mode.