How are cell monitoring systems used to balance a Lithium-Iron-Phosphate (LiFePO4) battery pack consisting of many individual cells?
Lithium-Iron-Phosphate battery cells from LiFeBATT are constructed from proprietary materials developed by Phostech in Canada, a subsidiary of Sud-Chemie. Phostech developed this technology from patented research by Dr. John Goodenough, a physicist at (the) University of Texas- Austin. LiFeBATT refines the raw Phostech materials with its own proprietary processing technologies to create finished battery cells of high quality and consistent performance. Though the high reliability of automated processing systems can produce consistent battery cell yields, each cell will exhibit slight variations in chemistry after production that are still within an acceptable range of performance. When combined into a high voltage battery pack with many cells, however, these small variances may affect overall battery performance during charge and discharge cycles that can include self-leakage, self-discharge, rush discharge (also known as pulse discharge), and temperature sensitivity. Dynamic balancing
Related Questions
- How does the Lithium-Iron-Phosphate (LiFePO4) battery cell charger work with a Battery Monitoring System (BMS) or Voltage Monitoring System (VMS) to balance the battery pack?
- How are cell monitoring systems used to balance a Lithium-Iron-Phosphate (LiFePO4) battery pack consisting of many individual cells?
- What type of battery is used in the Power Hawk PWR3X123 Power Pack?