Flox
Materials
- Oct 30, 2014
- 4
Does anyone have experience with charging voltages for high C/charge batteries? I'm looking at LTO chemistry specifically, which is generally rated to take a 10C charge. Fully charged voltage is 2.8v/cell. All the literature I can find regarding the fast charging of cells, i.e. high C does not discuss the voltage element. Standard charge rates, 1C and below, do show the voltage/current charge profile, which is never to exceed the fully charged cell voltage (but for some marginal amount---referring to lithium type chem.).
In my case I am working with LTO 66160 cells rated to handle a 350A (10C) charge. But if I apply the max rated 2.8V the cells won't even remotely approach that. At 3.8V they take 25A. What am I missing here? I don't see a way around blasting voltages that are way above the cell's max volts, and yet no literature about fast charging LTO cells touches on this.
In my case I am working with LTO 66160 cells rated to handle a 350A (10C) charge. But if I apply the max rated 2.8V the cells won't even remotely approach that. At 3.8V they take 25A. What am I missing here? I don't see a way around blasting voltages that are way above the cell's max volts, and yet no literature about fast charging LTO cells touches on this.