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Thursday, November 5, 2009

Li-Ion Pack From Scratch

While they're certainly quite useful, the SLA batteries I have are also quite heavy; it's like hauling around lead bricks for power. Their weight is probably part of why I have so many wheel problems, among other things, although our road edge conditions don't help much. I like the ability to pull huge currents from the SLA, which enable such great torque from the newer motor that I actually have mechanical drivetrain problems because of it. But they *are* heavy, and the faster I draw power from them the less power I can draw total, on a pretty severe curve compared to any other battery technology I'm aware of that I could get for the bike.

What this post is about is that I had an unexpected opportunity to get enough Li-Ion cells for a price I could (barely, sort-of) afford, to give me the range I would really like to have, assuming I can make them work without blowing myself up. ;-)

I'm currently collecting the rest of the information and parts I need to build the packs from. I've been reading about doing this for a couple of years now, and back at the beginning even started collecting "dead" laptop batteries, when I could get them for free, so I could harvest the still-good cells to build packs from. Unfortunately there usually were few if any cells worth saving, by the time I was given them, due to the time they sat around uncharged. :( So that idea went nowhere fast, as an ebike power pack. (I did build a better pack for my own laptop, though).

I'm figuring on 36V 10Ah packs for now, which will be paralleled to run the bike from. Each pack will take 50 (or 60, depending on sag under load) cells, so that should give me 5 or 6 packs. This will make it easier to find places on the bike to put them. It's possible I may go with 12V packs instead, to make it easier to series them for 48V or higher later on.

To bring new readers up to date: I run 45-ish pounds of 36V 18Ah SLA currently, using used server-UPS batteries. That gets me, with judicious use of pedals, 15 miles at 12-16MPH with frequent stops/starts for traffic controls. That's using my old motor, a 300W-ish, maybe 350, 2-pole brushed PMDC powerchair motor. I've now got a much heftier motor at 650W, also a powerchair motor, which I'm still working out the gearing for. It's a 4-pole brushed PMDC, with way more torque, and a totally different efficiency curve I'm still figuring out.

Typically with the old motor I pulled up to at least 20A battery current during acceleration depending on the gear I was in and the slope. Average current would be more like 4A to 10A. Terrain here is pretty flat, but there are some hills, and most of the big ones are very long, up to several miles at small grades, but often with a section of higher-grade here and there; two notable ones are enough that I would have to walk this bike up to the top rather than ride it, as even with the motor (the old one) I wouldn't be able to reach the top without either running out of battery or overheating the motor or both.

The new motor pulls probably more instantaneous current, but I haven't got a meter that will read higher than that right now. However, that current is pulled for a much shorter time, as it takes much less time to get up to speed with it. Average, it pulls around 4A-8A doing the same thing the other motor did. Not sure why it would be less (I expected it to be more, due to 4 poles).


The controller is a customized 2QD, so in theory I could do regen braking if I work out a clutch for the motor (so I can still coast) and take out the freewheel in the post-motor drivetrain. Right now the pedals and motor both feed into the main regular 21-speed bicycle drivetrain. The new motor has so much torque it can actually pop the chain over the teeth of the rear sprockets in higher gears. :shock: Not a problem I ever expected to have, so I'm still rethinking the drivetrain to possibly fix that. (I have a newer chain and cassette to try first).


On to the batteries (which I've not yet got in hand, but want to work out stuff before they arrive if I can):
They're 18650 sized, most of them Sanyo UR18650F, spec sheet here:
http://www.datasheetarchive.com/UR18650F-datasheet.html
or here in case that isn't working at some point:
http://www.houseofbatteries.com/pdf/UR18650F
The rest are Sony but I don't remember their p/n.

So they're nominally 3.7V 2.1Ah cells; I'll just round that down to 3.6V 2Ah and be happy for any extra. :)

Charging current is listed as 1C @ 4.2V, for 2.5 hours.

Assuming 3.6V start voltage and 3.0V LVC, I could draw up to 2C out of them to still get around 2Ah. I'd rather draw much less from any one cell, since I need range more than I need massive power for any length of time, excluding those rare hills.


I'd prefer to charge in the same configuration I discharge in, so I'd like to build a BMS for it. I'm still reading thru the fairly long threads that contain lots of BMS information, and I will probably end up building one of them from scratch on perfboard, using whatever parts I have laying around here. (I can't afford to buy or make PCBs, or else I'd get the ones from TPPacks and populate them with closest equivalents I have in my junkboxes. I've already spent my month's grocery money on the batteries themselves).

At first, to test the cells, I'll be charging them one at a time with a Sorenson linear adjustable voltage/current 60VDC 1.5A current-limited lab power supply, which I use right now to charge the third SLA in my pack (a 24V 3A wheelchair charger is used for the other two). Later, I will use the same supply to charge them as packs, at it's higher voltage. Yeah, it'll take at least all night to charge if I fully discharge the packs, but it's the best one I've got right now.

I have a bunch of other linear power supplies that I can probably convert to chargers, but they're not current-limited yet, and most are much lower voltage (one is only 5v, but up to 200A).

I also have a bunch of 4V-6V celphone chargers that I am considering turning into a portable charger system, if I have enough of them that are isolated so I can series their outputs, to use for opportunity trickle charging. Got a bunch of higher-voltage (12V-15V) laptop power supplies that can supply lots more current, if I can series those, to use instead. Have to work out a BMS before I can use either method, though.


Any constructive criticism, questions, or suggestions are welcome. :)

5 comments:

  1. What are you going to use for a bms? Lithium batts are a lot more picky on the charging routine than the la's are.

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  2. Ignore that last question. I missed the last line in the text somehow.
    Lee

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  3. There are a number of good DIY BMS solutions, several with many pages of discussion at the Endless Sphere forums, and it is likely one of these I will go with.

    I am hoping that I can find people with dead Lithium (any chemistry) packs willing to part with the BMS, which I can then use as-is or modified for Li-Ion chemistry. (If necessary repairing them first).

    I have a thread on ES's want ads for that, but as expected have gotten no replies.

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  4. Personally I'm giving up on the batteries for a while. I'm tired of hassling with them.
    I'm changing my two trikes over to 49cc pocket bike engines. The tadpole is done and now I have to work on the delta.

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  5. There are a lot of hassles with the batteries, but I would much rather have them than noisy smelly gas engines. ;-) Especially the noise, even with mufflers. I even get annoyed at the minimal noise my bike makes from the chain tensioner I have now.

    It's also easier to "stealth" the electric stuff; I don't know how many people stop to talk to me about the cool (or wierd) bike with lights that don't realize it is motorized until I either point it out, or start to ride away without my feet on the pedals at first.

    Littler kids seem to think it's a motorcycle (because it's way bigger than their bikes, with a different kind of seat, probably), but many older kids and adults aren't sure what it is or don't notice the motorization if they're not looking for it.

    I *do* want to get rid of the lead as a primary power source, and use it only as a backup super-range-extender, maybe on a BOB-type pusher trailer, or more likely on my regular cargo trailer, to add a helper motor on it that auto-follows the throttle/pedals of the bike's motor, primarily for startups and hills. Then I can load down even more cargo and still be able to keep up regular speeds and not worry about damaging the bike's motor trying to do it.

    Or alternately carry *all* my lead with me for a super-long-range trip. At a guess, I'd get...another 60-75 miles out of it with all the lead on there, accounting for the extra weight of it plus the trailer drag. Of course, it'd take about 4 days to charge all of that lead up after running it down, because I only have two suitable chargers. ;)

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