Electronic – Li-Ion battery charging as simple as possible

battery-chargingchargerlithium ion

I have read articles here and there about charging Li-Ion batteries. Most of them try to solve the problem of maximizing capacity and also maximizing cycles. The most recommended method is charging with around .5C current until the battery reaches 4.2v and then switching to the constant voltage until the current gets less than a threshold and then stopping it.

I don't need the battery to be fully charged, even half the capacity of 250mAh battery can run my circuit for days, and the circuit is almost always using external power source. I want to see if using no control circuit, but offering a lower voltage, for example 3.7v and limiting the current to for example 50mAh will hurt the battery in long run. Minimum parts in my circuit is essential for me, so I would be glad if I could remove as much as possible! Thanks in advance.

Best Answer

Are you familiar with simple modules like this ? It is basically a simple TP4056 board, for sure 1A is too much for you but a simple exchange of a resistor fixes that.

Although the suggested pulse charging to 4 V will work without doubt and I also think that that is a method that is safe enough. If you need to make the pulse and compare voltage then maybe a TP4056 (or any other similar IC) will be less complicated. The IC takes care of everything so you don't have to :-) And for the price, I know what I would choose.