Electronic – How will unmatched lithium-ion cells in parallel react

dischargelithium ionparallel

We are stocking a portable power pack for USB charging. We tested them when they first arrived and found no issues but after 3 months we tested some of the remaining stock and found about 50% of them were dead. I took a few apart and found the cells were 2.5v (+/-.1v) There are two lithium-ion cells connected in parallel.

I charged a few of them back up a little and tested them every few days. They self discharge back down to 2.5v and then stop.

I believe this is because of poorly balanced cells and at 2.5v the stronger battery no longer has enough energy to overcome the internal resistance to charge the weaker battery so rapid self-discharge stops.

Our manufacturer is claiming it was a fault in the circuitry and they changed a capacitor to solve the problem. I do not believe this because it seems like any circuitry problem would keep discharging the cells.

Am I correct in how two unmatched lithium-ion cells will behave in parallel? Will they self discharge to a point and then stop?

Also what are the potential dangers of this? Is there increased risk of fire from charging batteries that are not well matched?

Is this an obvious case of mismatched cells or could it possibly be a circuitry issue?

Thanks!

Best Answer

Batteries in parallel will "charge" each other until they are the same voltage. You could think of it as each cell being a bucket of water. If you put a pipe connecting all the buckets from the bottom, (analogous to batteries in parallel) all the buckets will equalize to the same level of water. This wont harm anything if your batteries are all close to the same amp rating (+/- 200ma or so) I suppose if one of your cells is bad and "leaking" energy the that could be causing your issue by constantly discharging all the other cells in your parallel bank...

All in all, batteries in parallel balance themselves automatically. Where you need things to be actively balanced is with cells in series or packs of parallel batteries in series with other packs. That active balancing is done with a balancing charger or a circuit in the pack. As long as all the packs connected in series are the same summed capacity.

Hope that helps!