Electronic – Charging Lead Acid battery using SMPS – unexpected voltage measured at battery

batteriesbattery-charginglead-acidvoltage

I am trying to charge a discharged 12 V Car Lead Acid Battery using a SMPS. According to voltage information provided for charging lead acid battery (https://batteryuniversity.com/learn/article/charging_the_lead_acid_battery), I have set the output of SMPS to 14.2 V.

However, as shown in the diagram attached, when I measure the voltage across battery it is showing 12 V instead. However, at junction, the voltage is shown as 14.2 V. The junction is simply a joint between wires coming from battery and the charger wires.

wiring diagram

So, I had some questions:

  1. Is 12 V being read due to fact that as battery sinks the current, the voltage reading at its terminals drops?

  2. As per the information provided for charging battery, the voltage range is 2.30 – 2.45 V/Cell or 13.8 – 14.7 V for Car Lead Acid Battery. So is this the open circuit voltage of the charger, or the voltage which should be read at the battery terminals when the battery is being charged?

Best Answer

What you are currently doing exactly opposite of what the article you linked to suggests charging lead-acid batteries.

The article says to use CCCV method which means constant current constant voltage. It means that the charger first limits the charge current to constant predefined level and the charging voltage is at the battery voltage level, until the battery voltage has risen to the predefined voltage level, so the charge current then starts decreasing.

Your SMPS is a constant voltage source, it will try to push as much as current it possibly can into your battery because battery has less voltage. Fortunately the resistance of wires has limited the current because there is voltage drop in them, but the battery or SMPS or wires may not handle the current if it is too much.