whatever
100 kW
- Joined
- Jun 3, 2010
- Messages
- 1,297
if you dont like alot of details dont read on!
( Postscript: this thread details ongoing work on my attempts to measure capacity of Lithium Cobalt Oxide cells with a view to capacity recovery eventually, many variables which I had not predicted make it a complex process, I had may as well put lots of the info up here, it might assist others trying to do same or similar things).
I started a thread to document some experimenting with soft a123 20ah cells a few weeks back
http://endless-sphere.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=14&t=69402
I needed to relearn how to use an icharger with logview before I tested the a123 20ahr cells, so I started messing with some very old lithium cobalt oxides ( not sure of exact age probably around 8 years or so). The cells were 5ahr when new, metal jacket type approx same size/shape as turnigy cells use in quadcopters etc. Theres no brand on the cells.
So I got sidetracked a bit and started messing with these old cells. The cell i'm testing at the moment has lost its voltage, it was near zero volts ( o.26v). I've heard cells that go to low voltage are unuseable but there may be some usage for these type of cells.
The icharger wont charge the cell if set to Lilo type ( assuming lilo is for lithium cobalt oxides), but it will charge the cell if set to nicad manual charge. Using the nicad manual charge at 1amp the cell has charged up. It doesn't follow the standard lilo charge scenario though. Here is a charge graph:

The charge graph is broken into two parts, due to a hickup using icharger on this laptop. The screensaver was set for 10mins, for some reason this stopped the connection between icharger and computer, so I had to restart the charge.
Setting screensaver time for a long period solved the disconnect problem between icharger and this laptop i'm using.
Inbetween the graphs was a 15min period where charge continued on icharger but I didn't log it.
I'm currently doing another charge graph that i'll post shortly.
What it shows is that a higher voltage is required than the standard lithium charge ( lilo or lipo) on the icharger.
If I try to charge the cell on lilo or lipo the cell goes directly to 4.1 or 4.2 volts and the amps goes very low, I assume the icharger is using internal resistance to gauge when to go into constant voltage stage and lower the amps.
Using nicad charge ( manual ) on the icharger allows the voltage to go higher, it sits from 5.2v at start of charge and goes to
5.7v near end of charge. Once the cell is off the charger it settles back down to 4.2v and holds that voltage.
The cell has a high internal resistance ( 1355mohm....assuming the m is milliohm?)
So the higher voltage seems to overcome that high internal resistance and allows the cell to charge at 1amp constant current,
it also means there is no constant voltage stage in the charge.
I stopped charging when the graph started to get fairly steep instead of a steady increase in voltage, which gives some indication when the cell if getting full. There was no temperature increase in the cell as far as I could tell just touching it by hand.
I have a bit of history on this particular cell as I've charged it previously and recorded the date and voltage:
1/7/14 ( d:m:yr)
0.26v
7/7/14
4.05v
17/8/14
3.89v
22/5/15
4.00v
Before the 1/7/14 the cell had been sitting unused for a long period in my possession, I have no idea if the cell had been
used before I acquired it. All I know is that it is very old.
Between 7/7/14 and 17/8/14 the voltage dropped from 4.05v down to 3.89v due to self discharge.
So I can work out the self discharge rate:
4.05-3.89v/ 1.3months = 0.18/1.3=0.14volts per month
To go from fully charged say 4.1volts to 0.26volts would take 4.1-3.86/ 0.14 = 3.84/0.14= 26 months, which means I've left it sitting for a bit over 2 years and its gone down to 0.26v. Its usage previous to that is not known.
I did a discharge test also on this cell :
( once again I had the issue of the screensaver timeout interferring with icharger, so I only have the second part of the discharge test, I will do another one shortly).

The discharge shows some interesting results, what was previously called a 3.7v nominal cell, could now be called a
2v nominal cell. The cell still holds charge, in total about 3ahr ( compared to when new it was 5 ahr).
The discharge graph was only possible using nicad discharge mode. It was 1amp and lvc set to 1.5v on icharger nicad discharge screen.
I will do some more discharge/charge tests to get better graphs. If time I will try some higher discharge rates.
The tests show a couple of things:
a lithium cobalt oxide cell that has gone to near zero volts may still be useful but its discharge and charge profiles will be altered significantly probably due to a high internal resistance ( perhaps due to sei layer build up and possibly due to pore closure of membrane, being in a metal jacket any swelling of thickness of sei layer on the graphite layer increased pressure
on the porous membrane, which may close the pores).
I doubt the cell will be of any use in an ebike, but considering it can deliver a constant current of 1amp at around 2volts for
a long period, it might still be useful for led lighting or other projects.
( Postscript: this thread details ongoing work on my attempts to measure capacity of Lithium Cobalt Oxide cells with a view to capacity recovery eventually, many variables which I had not predicted make it a complex process, I had may as well put lots of the info up here, it might assist others trying to do same or similar things).
I started a thread to document some experimenting with soft a123 20ah cells a few weeks back
http://endless-sphere.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=14&t=69402
I needed to relearn how to use an icharger with logview before I tested the a123 20ahr cells, so I started messing with some very old lithium cobalt oxides ( not sure of exact age probably around 8 years or so). The cells were 5ahr when new, metal jacket type approx same size/shape as turnigy cells use in quadcopters etc. Theres no brand on the cells.
So I got sidetracked a bit and started messing with these old cells. The cell i'm testing at the moment has lost its voltage, it was near zero volts ( o.26v). I've heard cells that go to low voltage are unuseable but there may be some usage for these type of cells.
The icharger wont charge the cell if set to Lilo type ( assuming lilo is for lithium cobalt oxides), but it will charge the cell if set to nicad manual charge. Using the nicad manual charge at 1amp the cell has charged up. It doesn't follow the standard lilo charge scenario though. Here is a charge graph:

The charge graph is broken into two parts, due to a hickup using icharger on this laptop. The screensaver was set for 10mins, for some reason this stopped the connection between icharger and computer, so I had to restart the charge.
Setting screensaver time for a long period solved the disconnect problem between icharger and this laptop i'm using.
Inbetween the graphs was a 15min period where charge continued on icharger but I didn't log it.
I'm currently doing another charge graph that i'll post shortly.
What it shows is that a higher voltage is required than the standard lithium charge ( lilo or lipo) on the icharger.
If I try to charge the cell on lilo or lipo the cell goes directly to 4.1 or 4.2 volts and the amps goes very low, I assume the icharger is using internal resistance to gauge when to go into constant voltage stage and lower the amps.
Using nicad charge ( manual ) on the icharger allows the voltage to go higher, it sits from 5.2v at start of charge and goes to
5.7v near end of charge. Once the cell is off the charger it settles back down to 4.2v and holds that voltage.
The cell has a high internal resistance ( 1355mohm....assuming the m is milliohm?)
So the higher voltage seems to overcome that high internal resistance and allows the cell to charge at 1amp constant current,
it also means there is no constant voltage stage in the charge.
I stopped charging when the graph started to get fairly steep instead of a steady increase in voltage, which gives some indication when the cell if getting full. There was no temperature increase in the cell as far as I could tell just touching it by hand.
I have a bit of history on this particular cell as I've charged it previously and recorded the date and voltage:
1/7/14 ( d:m:yr)
0.26v
7/7/14
4.05v
17/8/14
3.89v
22/5/15
4.00v
Before the 1/7/14 the cell had been sitting unused for a long period in my possession, I have no idea if the cell had been
used before I acquired it. All I know is that it is very old.
Between 7/7/14 and 17/8/14 the voltage dropped from 4.05v down to 3.89v due to self discharge.
So I can work out the self discharge rate:
4.05-3.89v/ 1.3months = 0.18/1.3=0.14volts per month
To go from fully charged say 4.1volts to 0.26volts would take 4.1-3.86/ 0.14 = 3.84/0.14= 26 months, which means I've left it sitting for a bit over 2 years and its gone down to 0.26v. Its usage previous to that is not known.
I did a discharge test also on this cell :
( once again I had the issue of the screensaver timeout interferring with icharger, so I only have the second part of the discharge test, I will do another one shortly).

The discharge shows some interesting results, what was previously called a 3.7v nominal cell, could now be called a
2v nominal cell. The cell still holds charge, in total about 3ahr ( compared to when new it was 5 ahr).
The discharge graph was only possible using nicad discharge mode. It was 1amp and lvc set to 1.5v on icharger nicad discharge screen.
I will do some more discharge/charge tests to get better graphs. If time I will try some higher discharge rates.
The tests show a couple of things:
a lithium cobalt oxide cell that has gone to near zero volts may still be useful but its discharge and charge profiles will be altered significantly probably due to a high internal resistance ( perhaps due to sei layer build up and possibly due to pore closure of membrane, being in a metal jacket any swelling of thickness of sei layer on the graphite layer increased pressure
on the porous membrane, which may close the pores).
I doubt the cell will be of any use in an ebike, but considering it can deliver a constant current of 1amp at around 2volts for
a long period, it might still be useful for led lighting or other projects.