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   sci.electronics.design      Electronic circuit design      143,326 messages   

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   Message 141,555 of 143,326   
   Don Y to legg   
   Re: Rechargeable 1.5V lithium batteries   
   07 Dec 25 13:42:27   
   
   From: blockedofcourse@foo.invalid   
      
   On 12/7/2025 1:11 PM, legg wrote:   
   > On Sat, 6 Dec 2025 19:12:35 -0700, Don Y    
   > wrote:   
   >   
   >> On 12/6/2025 2:27 PM, legg wrote:   
   >>> Rechargeable 1.5V lithium batteries are complicated animals.   
   >>> Not a battery, as such, so don't rely on standard battery   
   >>> chemistry descriptions to cover them.   
   >>>   
   >>>   From tested behaviour:   
   >>>   
   >>> There's a real 3.7V lithium cell inside there somewhere, with   
   >>> a charging voltage of over 4V on the battery terminals.Open   
   >>> circuit when charge is terminated internally.   
   >>>   
   >>> When it's not being charged, a switching regulator takes over   
   >>> to produce 1.5V on the same terminals, drawing from the   
   >>> lithium cell. This buck regulator is unstable when the battery   
   >>> is not being used, so the battery terminal voltage jumps around   
   >>> if you try to simply measure it.   
   >>>   
   >>> I wonder what this does to devices that count on the low noise   
   >>> usually produced by simpler standard cells. Guess I'll find out   
   >>> the hard way. Loaded, the voltage will stabilize, but then you've   
   >>> got normal switching ripple and, supposedly, emc issues.   
   >>   
   >> What about devices that count on the internal series resistance to limit   
   >> the current delivered to the load?   
   >>   
   >> I.e., does the lithium capacity JUST change the total amount of   
   >> available charge?  Or, is it exploited to also change the VI   
   >> characteristics of the source?   
   >   
   > Given the wide range of configurations, you'd have to examine each   
   > individually, to answer your concerns.   
   >>   
   >>> Nothing in the literature (?)- it's still the wild west as far as   
   >>> battery products go, in the far east. Currently less than   
   >>> US$1.50 per in low volume retail.   
   >>>   
   >>> I lucked into a bunch of rechargeable 9V (PP3) lithiums the other   
   >>> day - furnished with a micro-usb port for charging. Same basic   
   >>> idea, but with a boost regulator supplying the terminal voltage.   
   >>   
   >> What sort of usage patterns are you trying to address?  I think the   
   >> only items, here, with 9V batteries are smoke detectors (and they   
   >> are mains wired so the battery is an afterthought).   
   >>   
   >> Consumer "batteries" all seem to be headed to AAA and AA (with a few   
   >> AAAA just to screw things up).   
   >   
   > 9V is hand-held test equipment. I see few that are multiple AA or AAAs   
   > so far ~ which IS actually the topic.   
      
   Ah!  My bad.  The subject line said "Rechargeable 1.5V lithium batteries".   
   The reference to 9V batteries was buried at the end of your post.   
      
   > Some AAA rechargeables actually include a micro-usb charging port -   
   > but I see vendors phasing these out in favor of two terminals and   
   > internal (active) diode wizardry.   
   >   
   > RL   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   

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