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LIPO
BATTERY SAFETY
The following article was found at
http://www.rcgroups.com/forums/showthread.php?t=209187 by an RC flyer so
many references are to planes, but bottom line a lipo is a lipo
PLEASE READ IT WITH CARE
"After seeing the many many posts on LiPoly's and answering similar questions
time after time I've decided to put up a guide for using LiPoly batteries.
Lithium batteries are the preferred power sources for most electric modelers
today. They offer high discharge rates and a high energy storage/weight ratio.
However, using them properly and charging them correctly is no trivial task.
There are many things to consider before using lithium cells for e-flight. But
none is more important than safety.
1. Charging/Saftey IMPORTANT!
Until you are willing to follow all saftey precautions, DO NOT use lithium
batteries. If your a type of person that prefers to push the limits of
products, or be haphazard about following saftey requirements. Lithium
technology is not for you. Read on to find out why.
Lithium cells must be charged very differently than NiCad or NiMH. They
require a special charger specifically designed to charge lithium cells. In
general any charger that can charge lithium ion can charge lithium polymer,
assuming that the cell count is correct. You must NEVER charge lithium cells
with a NiCad or NiMH only battery charger. This is dangerous. Charging cells is
the most hazardous part of using lithium batteries. EXTREME care must be taken
when charging them. It is important to set your charger to the correct voltage
or cell count. Failure to do this can cause the battery to spew violent flames.
There have been many fires directly caused by lithium batteries. PLEASE BE
RESPONSIBLE when charging lithium batteries.
Here are a few MANDATORY guidelines for charging/using LiPos (Lithium Polymer
Batteries).
1. Use only a charger approved for lithium batteries. The charger may be
designed for Li-Ion or Li-Poly. Both batteries are charged in exactly the same.
Some older cell phone chargers may charge the batteries .1 volt to low (4.1 vs
4.2), but that will not harm the battery. However, inexpensive lithium chargers
are widely available and the use of cellphone chargers is highly discouraged.
2. Make certain that the correct cell count is set on your charger. Watch
the charger very closely for the first few minutes to ensure that the correct
cell count continues to be displayed. If you don't know how to do that, get a
charger that you do know how or don't charge the batteries.
3. Use the Taps. Before you charge a new Lithium pack, check the voltage
of each cell individually. Then do this after every tenth cycle there after.
This is absolutely critical in that an unbalanced pack can explode while
charging even if the correct cell count is chosen. If the cells are not within
0.1 volts of each other then charge each cell individually to 4.2 volts so that
they are all equal. If after every discharge the pack is unbalanced you have a
faulty cell and that pack must be replaced.
Taps are provided on most new lithium packs. Taps give you the ability to check
individual cell voltages and charge one cell at a time. Make sure and get the
appropriate connector to go into your taps. Don't try to stick you volt meter
probes in the taps to measure voltage. They could slip and short your cells.
Don't try to charge more than one cell at a time from the taps. Unless you have
an isolated ground charging system, you'll short your batteries out. Refer to
your individual cell maker for tap pin-outs.
4. NEVER charge the batteries unattended. This is the number one reason
for houses and cars being burned to a crisp by lithium fires.
5. Use a safe surface to charge your batteries on so that if they burst
into flame no damage will occur. Vented fire safes, pyrex dishes with sand in
the bottom, fireplaces, plant pots, are all good options.
6. DO NOT CHARGE AT MORE THAN 1C unless specifically authorized by the pack
vendor. I have personally had a fire in my home because of violating this
rule. Todays highest discharge batteries can supposedly be safely charged at
greater than 1C, however so far in all cases doing so shortens the life of the
pack. Better to buy 3 packs than to try to charge 1 pack 3 times quickly. This
may change in the future but as of Winter 2005 1C is still the recommended
charge rate.
7. DO NOT puncture the cell, ever. If a cell balloons quickly place it in
a fire safe place, especially if you were charging it when it ballooned. After
you have let the cell sit in the fire safe place for at least 2 hours. Discharge
the cell/pack slowly. This can be done by wiring a flashlight bulb of
appropriate voltage (higher is voltage is ok, lower voltage is no) up to your
batteries connector type and attaching the bulb to the battery. Wait until the
light is completely off, then throw the battery away.
8. If you crash with your lithium cells they may be damaged such that
they are shorted inside. The cells may look just fine. If you crash in ANY way
carefully remove the battery pack from the aircraft and watch it carefully for
at least the next 20 min. Several fires have been caused by damaged cells being
thrown in the car and then the cells catch fire later and destroys the car
completely.
9. Charge your batteries in a open ventilated area. If a battery does
rupture or explode hazardous fumes and material will spew from the battery.
10. Keep a bucket of sand nearby when you are flying or charging
batteries. This is a cost effective way to extinguish fires. This is very cheap
and absolutly necessary.
11. It can happen to you, do not think to yourself that “it won't happen
to me” as soon as you do that it you'll be trying to rescue your kids from your
burning house or car. I'm very serious about this.
Now that we have covered that important topic let's move on to lighter matters:
2. Lithium What?
Lithium Polymer batteries are used in many electronic devices. Cell Phone,
Laptops, PDA's, Hearing Aids just to name a few. Most, if not all, lithium
polymer batteries are not designed for RC use, we use them in different
applications than they were designed for. They are similar to Lithium Ion
batteries in that they each have a nominal voltage of 3.6 volts, but dissimilar
in that they do not have a hard metal casing but rather a flexible material
encloses the chemicals inside. The "normal" lithium polymer batteries are thin
rectangle shapes with two tabs on the top one positive one negative. The reason
we use Lithium cells is that they are significantly lighter than comparable
NiCad or NiMH batteries, which makes our planes fly longer and better.
3. Voltage and Cell Count:
LiPolys act differently than NiCad or NiMH batteries do when charging and
discharging. Lithium batteries are fully charged when each cell has a voltage of
4.2 volts. They are fully discharged when each cell has a voltage of 3.0 volts.
It is important not to exceed both the high voltage of 4.2 volts and the low
voltage of 3.0 volts. Exceeding these limits can harm the battery.
The way to ensure that you do not go below 3.0 volts while flying is to set the
low voltage cutoff (LVC) of your electronic speed control (ESC). It important to
use a programmable ESC since the correct voltage cutoff is critical to the life
of your batteries. Use the ESC's programming mode to set the LVC to 3.0 volts
per cell with a hard cutoff, or 3.3 volts per cell with a soft cutoff. If your
ESC does not have hard or soft cutoff, use 3.0 volts per cell. You will know
when flying that it is time to land when you experience a sudden drop in power
caused by the LVC.
If your ESC has an automatic lithium mode. Use it, it will correctly sense the
number of cells and set the auto cutoff appropriately.
If you have previously been flying with NiCad or NiMH batteries, switching over
to lithium polymer will result in a different number of cells being used. If you
had 6 to 7 round cells then 2 lithium polymer cells will correctly duplicate the
voltage of those cells. If you had 10-11 cells then 3 lithium polymer cells
would be right for you. There are a lot of 8 cell flyer's out there that are
stuck between 2 and 3 cells. In my experience the best option is to determine
how many watts you were using before and duplicate that with your LiPos, Motor,
and Prop. For example. If you were running 8 cells (9.6volts) at 10 amps on a
speed 400 airplane, then you have 9.6 x10, 96 watts. So if you went with 2
lithium polymer cells (7.2 volts nominal) then you'd need to change your prop
such that you used 13 amps. If you went to 3 LiPoly's (10.8 volts nominal) then
you'd need to reduce the amperage to 8.9 amps. These estimates are approximate,
and some experimentation is required for best results but conserving Watts is a
good way to start.
4.10C from 3S4P? Naming conventions explained.
How fast a battery can discharge is it's maximum current capacity. Current is
generally rated in C's for the battery. C is how long it takes to discharge the
battery in fractions of an hour. For instance 1 C discharges the battery in 1/1
hours or 1 hour. 2 C discharges the battery in ½ or half an hour. All RC
batteries are rated in milli Amp hours. If a battery is rated at 2000 mAh and
you discharge it at 2000mA (or 2 amps, 1 amp = 1000mA) it will be completely
discharged in one hour. The C rating of the battery is thus based on its
capacity. A 2000mAh cell discharged a 2 amps is being discharged at 1C (2000mA x
1), a 2000mAh cell discharged at 6 amps is being discharged at 3C( 2000mA x 3).
All batteries have limitations on how fast they can discharge. Because of this
many LiPoly batteries are put in parallel to increase the current capacity of
the battery pack. When 2 batteries are wired positive to positive and negative
to negative they become like one battery with double the capacity. If you have 2
2000mAh cells and you wire them in parallel then the result is the same as 1
4000mAh cell. This 4000mAh cell has the same C rating as the original 2000mAh
cells did. Thus if the 2000mAh cells could discharge at a maximum of 5C, or 10
amps then the new 4000mAh cell can also discharge at 5C or (4000mA x 5) 20 amps.
This method of battery pack building allows us to use LiPoly batteries at higher
currents than single cells could produce.
The naming convention that allows you to decipher how many cells are in parallel
and how many are in series is the XSXP method. The number in front of the S
represents the number of series cells in the pack so 3S means it's a 3 cell
pack. The number in front of P means the number of cells in parallel. So a 3S4P
pack of 2100mAh cells has a total of 12 cells inside. It will have the voltage
of any other 3S pack since the number of cells in series determines the voltage.
It will have the current handling of 4 times the maximum C rating of the 12
individual cells. So say our 3S4P pack had a maximum discharge of 6C. That means
that it has a nominal voltage of 10.8 volts (3x3.6) and a maximum discharge rate
of 50.4 amps (2100mAh x 6Cx4P ).
5. Which battery should you buy?
With so many choices out there it is difficult to decipher what is marketing
hype, what is brand
loyalty, and what is outright lies. Battery manufacturers are constantly trying
to one up one another. While capitalism can drive prices down, it also can give
cause to false claims about products.
One great way to find out what the best battery is, is to look at graphs of the
batteries performance. Looking at how low the voltage of the cell drops at
various amperages will give you a metric to compare that battery to similar
size/weight batteries.
If graphs aren't your thing then simply look at what other people are using in
successful setups that are similar to your application. If a lot of people are
reporting long flight times and lots of power from airplane X, with power system
Y, and battery Z and you do the same, then if your setup is similar the same
battery will probably work well for you.
It pays to learn something about Watts, Volts, and Amps. Understanding these
concepts is beyond the scope of this document, but can serve you well in not
only figuring out what battery is best but also in your electric aircraft hobby.
I'm not convinced that a 30C battery is really any better than a 10 or 20C
battery. Sure a higher C rating means it can discharge faster. But at the same
time a battery discharged at 20C continuously will be empty in 3 minutes. Do you
really only want to use the battery for 3 minutes? I love having burst power in
helicopters and boats, but in almost all other applications actually running a
battery at or above 20C is useless to me. I prefer to run batteries at 8-10 C
and have a little headroom if I need it.
A final note on choosing a battery. Don't cheap out. Confirm that your batteries
are capable of running that the amperage level you plan to use them at. Running
a cell at a higher C rating than the battery can handle can not only damage your
batteries, but it can also damage your speed control. Castle Creations has an
excellent article on how using a weak battery can destroy a perfectly good speed
control of any brand. Better to buy a bit better battery than you need than to
destroy your electronics.
6. Dealing with temperature.
Lithium batteries like heat, but not too much. In the winter time, try to keep
your batteries from the cold as much as possible. Leave them in the car while
your flying, or keep them in your cargo pants... etc. At the same time don't let
them heat up too much. Try to keep your batteries from reaching 160F after use.
This will prolong the life of the cells. A good way to measure temperature is a
handheld IR meter, they can be found for around $50.00 at most hobby shops. "
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