This post will introduce you to battery charging and tell you how to charge lithium cells using a bench power supply.
Executive summary:
Attach a single lithium cell to the power supply and set it at 4.20 volts and 0.5C. Leave it charging until the current drops to 1/20C. Repeat for all cells in the pack.
I use lithium cells (LiPo, LiIon, etc.) in a lot of my projects – usually surplus cellphone batteries. They have much better energy/volume and energy/weight ratios than other battery types (the next best is NiMH).
But they have a reputation of being “tricky” to charge, and needing a special charger.
Not really.
Put your money into a bench power supply instead of a lithium charger. The power supply will do the charging just as well, and is tremendously useful for other things as well.
You need a constant voltage/constant current (CV/CC) DC power supply. This lets you set a maximum voltage and a maximum current at the same time.
Batteries 101
Batteries are made up of cells in series. Each cell has a typical voltage that depends on its chemistry – carbon-zinc and alkaline cells are around 1.5 volts, NiCd and NiMH around 1.2 volts, lithium cells around 3.3 to 3.7 volts. Lead-acid cells are around 2 volts.
To get higher voltages, cells are put in series in a battery. Sometimes there’s only one cell in the battery, as with typical lithium “batteries” at 3.6v or so. (Technically these ought to be called just “cells” not “batteries” since there’s only one cell, but people often call them batteries anyway.)
A cell (or battery) has a capacity rated in amp-hours (AH or mAH). For example, an 800 mAH battery can produce 800 mA for 1 hour, or 400 mA for 2 hours, or 8 mA for 100 hours (at the rated voltage) before the battery is drained. In theory.
In practice, cells are usually rated assuming you’ll be draining them over 20 hours. Most batteries produce more energy if you drain them slowly. So, a 5 AH battery can produce something like 250 mA for 20 hours (0.25 * 20 = 5). If you drained it at a rate of 5 amps, it would die before one hour is up.
Also, the voltage gradually drops as you discharge the battery – it starts a little above the rated voltage, then spends most of the time near the rated voltage. When it starts to drop quickly from there, it’s empty.
The current needed to (theoretically) empty the battery in 1 hour is called C. Charge and discharge currents are given in units of C. For a 800 mAH cellphone battery, C is 800 mA.
Most cells have a maximum discharge current beyond which their performance drops off dramatically. For tiny watch batteries (coin cells), this current is really small – something like 0.002C. (“0.002C” would often be called the “500-hour rate”.) These cells are designed to run a long time at tiny currents. At the opposite extreme are lithium polymer cells designed for high-current uses such as in electric-powered model airplanes. I’ve seen some with a maximum discharge rate of 20C – meaning you can drain them in 1/20 of an hour (3 minutes) reasonably efficiently and without damaging them!
Charging
Most rechargeable battery types can be charged at modest constant currents, without worrying about voltage – something like 0.05 to 0.1C (NiMH, NiCd, lead-acid). So you could charge one of these cell types in 10 or 20 hours with your bench power supply by setting the current to 0.1C or so (500 mA for a 5 AH battery), and just turning the voltage up all the way (so it’s not limited).
(I’m not talking fast charge here – that’s a whole other topic; ask Google about that, not me).
Lithium cells are different. They need to be charged at a constant current until reaching a specific voltage, and then constant voltage. But that’s trivial if you have a CV/CC bench power supply. Continue reading








