A bit of an old post now Neal, but I've been reading through this post and the Schottky Diode Parallel Pack post (
link) as I'm wanting the option of paralleling up my 'no name' 36v,10Ah (10s, 4p) bottle battery with my recently built 36v, 7Ah (10s, 2p) using LG M50LT 21700 cells.
I'm looking at going for a simple 'Y' connector (ie no diodes, Shottky, Ideal or otherwise) to keep the arrangement as simple as possible. To connect the two batteries like this then of course as has been posted many times, the batteries need to be at or near the same voltage - the question is
how near do the voltages need to be? Herewith are my thoughts/assumptions on this and all feedback is welcome.
- Where the voltage is different between the two packs, it must not be of a magnitude such that the normal discharge current of one battery nor more importantly, the charge current of the lower voltage of the two batteries, is exceeded.
- Starting with what is the resistance of the battery packs? I do not know what cells are in the bottle battery but the resistance of the LG M50LT is known, albeit it is not a fixed figure due to many variables such as temperature, SoC and so on, but for this exercise lets take it as 20 milli-ohms per cell. This gives a pack resistance for the 20 cells in a 10s, 2p arrangement, a value of 100 milli-ohms
- The bottle battery cells at 2,500mAh each I likely to be a higher resistance than this so I'll use the figure for the LG M50LT - ie a pack resistance of 100 milli-ohms
- Further, let's assume a max charge current of 0.3C so that's nominally 1.6A per cell for the LG M50LT, leading to a max charging current for the 2p pack of 3.2A
- So what voltage across the 100 milli-ohm battery pack will give a current of 3.2A?
- Answer from ohms law of V=IxR = 0.320V or 320mV, implying that when connecting my two battery packs together in parallel, I should aim for their voltages to be within 320mV of each other?
Now at this stage that is a hypothesis so I'd be very grateful (Neal or others) for comments on the validity of my approach.