68dad8260b2f947724cf27aa5e1979cad4c4a4ea
battery-dat/battery-rechargerable-dat/battery-li-dat/battery-li-size-dat/18650-dat/18650-0V-dat.md
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| 1 | +
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| 2 | +# 18650-0V-dat.md
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| 3 | +
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| 4 | +
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| 5 | +### 18650 battery capacity
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| 6 | +
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| 7 | +The capacity of an **18650 lithium-ion battery** depends heavily on its **brand**, **intended application (Capacity-type vs. High-drain/Power-type)**, and whether it is a genuine product.
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| 8 | +
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| 9 | +For authentic, reputable brands, the standard capacity range is typically between **1,200mAh and 3,500mAh**.
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| 10 | +
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| 11 | +Here is a detailed breakdown of 18650 battery capacities:
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| 12 | +
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| 13 | +### 1. Standard Capacity Ranges by Type
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| 14 | +* **Capacity-Type / Regular Batteries (Low Discharge Current):** Typically range from **2,600mAh to 3,500mAh**. These are designed for devices that require long runtime but low current draw, such as high-powered flashlights, power banks, and laptop battery packs.
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| 15 | +* **High-Drain / Power-Type Batteries (High Discharge Current):** Typically range from **1,500mAh to 2,500mAh**. To safely output massive currents (e.g., 10A, 20A, or up to 30A) for power tools, vacuum cleaners, and e-bikes, these batteries sacrifice overall energy density/capacity.
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| 16 | +
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| 17 | +---
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| 18 | +
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| 19 | +### 2. The Physical and Technical Limits
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| 20 | +As of current chemical engineering limits, the maximum physical capacity for a genuine, tier-1 manufactured 18650 battery is around **3,500mAh to 3,600mAh** (such as the famous *Panasonic NCR18650GA* or *Samsung 35E*).
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| 21 | +
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| 22 | +> ⚠️ **Beware of Fakes and Counterfeits:** If you see 18650 batteries online claiming capacities like **4,000mAh, 5,000mAh, or 9,900mAh**, they are **100% fake**. These are usually produced by counterfeit workshops that wrap recycled, low-quality cells in misleading labels. Given the fixed physical dimensions of an 18650 cell (18mm diameter, 65mm length), it is scientifically impossible to fit that much capacity using current lithium-ion technology.
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| 23 | +
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| 24 | +---
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| 25 | +
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| 26 | +### 3. Popular Models from Top-Tier Manufacturers
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| 27 | +
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| 28 | +| Brand | Model | Nominal Capacity | Battery Type | Common Applications |
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| 29 | +| :-------------------- | :----------- | :--------------- | :---------------------------- | :------------------------------------ |
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| 30 | +| **Panasonic / Sanyo** | NCR18650B | **3400mAh** | Capacity-Type | Flashlights, laptops, energy storage |
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| 31 | +| **Panasonic / Sanyo** | NCR18650GA | **3500mAh** | Capacity-Type (High-capacity) | Premium flashlights, electric bikes |
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| 32 | +| **Samsung** | INR18650-35E | **3500mAh** | Capacity-Type | Power banks, long-runtime electronics |
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| 33 | +| **Samsung** | INR18650-25R | **2500mAh** | High-Drain (20A) | Power tools, cordless vacuums |
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| 34 | +| **Murata / Sony** | US18650VTC6 | **3000mAh** | High-Drain (30A) | High-performance tools, drones |
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| 35 | +| **LG** | INR18650-HG2 | **3000mAh** | High-Drain (20A) | High-power appliances ("LG Choc") |
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| 36 | +
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| 37 | +---
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| 38 | +
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| 39 | +### 4. Factors Affecting Real-World Usable Capacity
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| 40 | +The capacity labeled on the battery isn't always the exact amount of energy you will get in real-world usage:
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| 41 | +* **Discharge Cut-off Voltage:** A typical 18650 has a nominal voltage of 3.6V/3.7V and a full charge of 4.2V. If your device automatically shuts off when the battery drops to 3.0V, you won't be able to access the remaining energy stored down to the absolute safe limit (usually 2.5V).
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| 42 | +* **Discharge Current Draw:** Drawing a massive current from a standard capacity-type cell will cause high internal resistance and heat. This causes the voltage to drop prematurely, significantly reducing the actual capacity delivered.
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| 43 | +* **Operating Temperature:** Lithium-ion performance drops drastically in cold environments. In sub-zero temperatures (below 0°C/32°F), internal chemical activity slows down, causing a temporary but significant reduction in usable capacity.
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| 44 | +
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| 45 | +
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| 46 | +
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| 47 | +## 0V issues
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| 48 | +
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| 49 | +A Li-ion cell showing **0 V** usually means something seriously wrong.
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| 50 | +Two main causes:
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| 51 | +
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| 52 | +---
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| 53 | +
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| 54 | +## 1. **Protection Circuit Tripped** (Only for “protected 18650”)
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| 55 | +Some 18650 cells include a tiny PCB at the bottom.
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| 56 | +If the cell is over-discharged, the protection board **disconnects** the output → terminal voltage reads nearly **0 V**.
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| 57 | +
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| 58 | +- Internal cell voltage is usually still **1–2 V**, not truly 0 V.
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| 59 | +- Only applies if your cell is a **protected** 18650.
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| 60 | +
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| 61 | +---
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| 62 | +
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| 63 | +## 2. **Cell Is Internally Damaged** (Most common)
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| 64 | +A fully unprotected or old 18650 can reach 0 V if:
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| 65 | +
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| 66 | +- Severe over-discharge
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| 67 | +- Internal chemical breakdown
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| 68 | +- Internal short circuit
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| 69 | +- Copper plating inside
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| 70 | +- Safety vent (pressure valve) triggered
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| 71 | +
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| 72 | +If the safety vent opens, the cell is **permanently unsafe**.
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| 73 | +
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| 74 | +**True 0 V = the cell is dead.**
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| 75 | +
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| 76 | +---
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| 77 | +
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| 78 | +# ⚠️ Can You “Fix” a 0 V 18650?
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| 79 | +**No. Not safely.**
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| 80 | +Trying to recharge a 0 V Li-ion can cause:
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| 81 | +
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| 82 | +- Fire
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| 83 | +- Venting hot gas
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| 84 | +- Explosion
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| 85 | +- Thermal runaway
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| 86 | +
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| 87 | +Even trained engineers only attempt recovery in fireproof labs.
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| 88 | +
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| 89 | +**For home use:
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| 90 | +0 V = NOT repairable.**
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| 91 | +
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| 92 | +---
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| 93 | +
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| 94 | +# ✔️ What You Should Do
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| 95 | +- Do **NOT** charge it.
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| 96 | +- Do **NOT** heat, hammer, or puncture it.
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| 97 | +- Recycle it at an **e-waste / battery recycling point**.
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| 98 | +
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| 99 | +This is the only safe option.
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| 100 | +
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| 101 | +
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| 102 | +
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| 103 | +## ref
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| 104 | +
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| 105 | +- [[18650-dat]] |
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battery-dat/battery-rechargerable-dat/battery-li-dat/battery-li-size-dat/18650-dat/18650-dat.md
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| 1 | +
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| 2 | +# 18650-dat
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| 3 | +
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| 4 | +
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| 5 | +
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| 6 | +
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| 7 | +
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| 8 | +18mm x 65mm
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| 9 | +
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| 10 | +
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| 11 | +
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| 12 | +- [[18650-battery-holder-dat]]
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| 13 | +
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| 14 | +- [[18650-0V-dat]]
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| 15 | +
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| 16 | +## discharge current
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| 17 | +
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| 18 | +### 🔧 Typical Discharge Ratings by Category
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| 19 | +
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| 20 | +| **Category** | **Examples** | **Max Continuous Discharge** | **Notes** |
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| 21 | +|--------------------------|--------------------------|-------------------------------|-------------------------------------------|
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| 22 | +| **Standard Energy Cells** | Panasonic NCR18650B | 2A–3A | High capacity (up to 3400mAh), low drain |
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| 23 | +| | LG MJ1, Samsung 35E | 5A | Up to ~3500mAh |
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| 24 | +| **Balanced Cells** | Samsung 30Q, LG HG2 | 10A–15A | Good mix of capacity (3000mAh) and power |
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| 25 | +| **High-Drain Cells** | Sony VTC6, Molicel P26A | 20A | Often 2600–3000mAh |
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| 26 | +| **Extreme High-Drain** | Sony VTC5A, Molicel P28A | 25A–30A | Used in power tools, e-skates, vaping |
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| 27 | +
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| 28 | +---
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| 29 | +
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| 30 | +### 📌 Notes
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| 31 | +
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| 32 | +- **Pulse current** (short bursts) may be 1.5–2× the continuous rating.
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| 33 | +- Always check **manufacturer datasheet** for:
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| 34 | + - Continuous discharge current
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| 35 | + - Pulse current (duration & cooldown)
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| 36 | + - Required cooling
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| 37 | +- Actual safe discharge also depends on:
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| 38 | + - Temperature
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| 39 | + - Battery aging
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| 40 | + - Internal resistance
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| 41 | +
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| 42 | +---
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| 43 | +
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| 44 | +### ⚠️ Warning
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| 45 | +
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| 46 | +Using a cell above its rated discharge current may:
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| 47 | +- Cause overheating or thermal runaway
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| 48 | +- Reduce lifespan drastically
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| 49 | +- Trigger BMS protection or cause fire risk
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| 50 | +
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| 51 | +---
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| 52 | +
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| 53 | +### ✅ Recommended Use
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| 54 | +
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| 55 | +| **Application** | **Recommended Cell Type** |
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| 56 | +|-----------------------|---------------------------------|
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| 57 | +| Flashlights, DIY packs | Standard or balanced (5A–10A) |
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| 58 | +| E-bikes, e-scooters | High-drain (15A–30A) |
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| 59 | +| Power tools, drones | High to extreme high-drain |
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| 60 | +
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| 61 | +
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| 62 | +
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| 63 | +## 14500 vs 18650 vs 21700 batteries
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| 64 | +
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| 65 | +| Feature | AA Size Lithium (14500) | 18650 Lithium-Ion | 21700 Lithium-Ion |
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| 66 | +| ---------------------------- | -------------------------- | --------------------------- | ------------------------- |
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| 67 | +| **Typical Size (mm)** | 14 x 50 | 18 x 65 | 21 x 70 |
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| 68 | +| **Nominal Voltage** | 3.7V | 3.6V – 3.7V | 3.6V – 3.7V |
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| 69 | +| **Capacity Range** | 500 – 800 mAh | 1800 – 3500 mAh | 4000 – 5000+ mAh |
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| 70 | +| **Max Continuous Discharge** | 1 – 3A | 5 – 20A | 10 – 35A |
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| 71 | +| **Common C-Rate** | 1C – 3C | 1C – 10C | 1C – 10C+ |
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| 72 | +| **Rechargeable** | Yes | Yes | Yes |
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| 73 | +| **Common Use Cases** | Small flashlights, sensors | Laptops, power tools, vapes | EVs, e-bikes, power tools |
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| 74 | +| **Weight (approx.)** | ~20g | ~45g | ~70g |
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| 75 | +| **Energy Density** | Low – Medium | Medium | High |
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| 76 | +
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| 77 | +
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| 78 | +
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| 79 | +
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| 80 | +## **18650 Battery Types**
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| 81 | +
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| 82 | +| **Type** | **Main Composition** | **Features** | **Applications** |
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| 83 | +| --------------------------------- | ------------------------------------------------ | ------------------------------------------------ | --------------------------------------- |
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| 84 | +| **NCM/NCA** | Nickel-Cobalt-Manganese / Nickel-Cobalt-Aluminum | High energy density, medium safety | EVs (Tesla Model S/X), laptop batteries |
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| 85 | +| **LFP (Lithium Iron Phosphate)** | Lithium Iron Phosphate | Long lifespan, high safety, lower energy density | Energy storage, power tools, e-bikes |
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| 86 | +| **LCO (Lithium Cobalt Oxide)** | Lithium Cobalt Oxide | High energy density, shorter lifespan | Laptops, battery packs |
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| 87 | +| **IMR (Lithium Manganese Oxide)** | Lithium Manganese Oxide | High discharge rate, heat resistance | High-power flashlights, vaping devices |
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| 88 | +
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| 89 | +---
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| 90 | +
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| 91 | +## **18650 vs. 21700 Batteries**
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| 92 | +| **Model** | **Size** | **Energy Density** | **Common Uses** |
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| 93 | +| --------- | ---------- | ------------------ | ------------------------------- |
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| 94 | +| **18650** | 18 × 65 mm | 2000 – 3500mAh | Laptops, EVs, tools |
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| 95 | +| **21700** | 21 × 70 mm | 4000 – 5000mAh | Tesla batteries, energy storage |
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| 96 | +
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| 97 | +Tesla originally used **18650 batteries** in **Model S/X** but later switched to **21700** for **Model 3/Y** and is now moving towards **4680** cells for higher efficiency.
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| 98 | +
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| 99 | +
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| 100 | +The 18650 battery should fall under the Lithium-ion Battery category, as it is a specific form factor of the lithium-ion battery, commonly used in applications such as laptops, power tools, flashlights, and electric vehicles.
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| 101 | +
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| 102 | +## safety concern
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| 103 | +
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| 104 | +After 30 years of development, the preparation process of 18650 battery has been very mature. In addition to the great improvement in performance, its safety is also perfect.
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| 105 | +
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| 106 | +To prevent the metal casing from exploding, the battery is now fitted with a safety valve at the top. The safety valve is now a standard part of every 18650 Li-ion battery and is the most important barrier. When the pressure inside the cell becomes too high, the top safety valve opens to vent and depressurize, preventing an explosion.
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| 107 | +
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| 108 | +However, when the safety valve is open, chemicals leaking from inside the battery can react with oxygen in the air at high temperatures and still cause a fire.
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| 109 | +
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| 110 | +In addition, most 18650 batteries now also come with their own protection panel with overcharge and overdischarge and short circuit protection, which has high safety performance.
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| 111 | +
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| 112 | +- [[battery-protection-dat]]
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| 113 | +
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| 114 | +
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| 115 | +## CID safety
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| 116 | +
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| 117 | +The CID (Current Interrupt Device) in an 18650 battery is a safety feature designed to prevent overheating and potential hazards. If the internal pressure of the battery gets too high (usually due to overcharging or overheating), the CID disconnects the circuit, stopping the current flow to prevent a dangerous situation, such as thermal runaway or explosion.
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| 118 | +
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| 119 | +Each manufacturer might have slightly different specifications, but the CID is a common safety component in lithium-ion batteries, especially in high-capacity cells like the 18650.
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| 120 | +
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| 121 | +
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| 122 | +### CID reset trick
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| 123 | +
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| 124 | +- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IhUtKvCV6fs&ab_channel=WalamusPrime
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| 125 | +
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| 126 | +
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| 127 | +
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| 128 | +### 🔒 What is CID Safety for 18650 Batteries?
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| 129 | +
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| 130 | +#### What is CID?
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| 131 | +
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| 132 | +- **CID** stands for **Current Interrupt Device**.
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| 133 | +- It is a **built-in safety mechanism** inside many 18650 lithium-ion cells.
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| 134 | +- Designed to **prevent dangerous overpressure and overheating**.
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| 135 | +
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| 136 | +---
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| 137 | +
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| 138 | +#### How Does CID Work?
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| 139 | +
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| 140 | +- The CID is a **pressure-sensitive switch** inside the cell.
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| 141 | +- When internal gas pressure rises above a certain threshold (due to:
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| 142 | + - Overcharging,
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| 143 | + - Short circuit,
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| 144 | + - Thermal runaway),
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| 145 | +
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| 146 | + the CID **disconnects the internal current path**.
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| 147 | +- This **interrupts current flow**, effectively stopping the battery from further charging or discharging.
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| 148 | +- It **helps prevent cell rupture, fire, or explosion**.
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| 149 | +
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| 150 | +---
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| 151 | +
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| 152 | +#### Why Is CID Important?
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| 153 | +
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| 154 | +- Lithium-ion cells generate gas if damaged or overcharged.
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| 155 | +- Pressure build-up can cause catastrophic failure.
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| 156 | +- CID acts as a **last-resort safety valve** inside the cell.
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| 157 | +- It **works alongside external protection circuits and BMS**.
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| 158 | +
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| 159 | +---
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| 160 | +
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| 161 | +#### Summary Table
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| 162 | +
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| 163 | +| Feature | Description |
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| 164 | +|-----------------------|------------------------------------------------|
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| 165 | +| Purpose | Prevent overpressure and overheating |
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| 166 | +| Mechanism | Pressure-activated internal switch |
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| 167 | +| Activation Threshold | Specific pressure level inside the cell |
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| 168 | +| Effect | Interrupts internal circuit to stop current flow |
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| 169 | +| Role | Safety backup inside individual 18650 cells |
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| 170 | +
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| 171 | +---
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| 172 | +
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| 173 | +#### Important Notes
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| 174 | +
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| 175 | +- CID **does not reset** after activation; cell is permanently disabled.
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| 176 | +- Cells with CID still **require external protection** (BMS).
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| 177 | +- Not all lithium cells have CID — mostly found in high-quality 18650s.
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| 178 | +
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| 179 | +### short test
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| 180 | +
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| 181 | +- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bKQzfrO6WBA&ab_channel=EngineerX
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| 182 | +- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AUMiSk1D4Xg&ab_channel=DIYTech%26Repairs
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| 183 | +
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| 184 | +
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| 185 | +## 🔋 How to Use 18650 Batteries Safely
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| 186 | +
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| 187 | +### 1. Choose Quality Batteries
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| 188 | +
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| 189 | +- Buy from **reputable brands** (Panasonic, Samsung, LG, Sony, Molicel)
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| 190 | +- Avoid cheap or counterfeit cells
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| 191 | +- Check for **safety features** like CID and PCM
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| 192 | +
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| 193 | +---
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| 194 | +
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| 195 | +### 2. Use Proper Chargers
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| 196 | +
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| 197 | +- Use a charger designed for **Li-ion 18650 cells**
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| 198 | +- Prefer chargers with **constant current / constant voltage (CC/CV)** charging profile
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| 199 | +- Avoid using chargers designed for other chemistries
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| 200 | +
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| 201 | +---
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| 202 | +
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| 203 | +### 3. Never Overcharge or Overdischarge
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| 204 | +
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| 205 | +- Do not charge above **4.2V per cell**
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| 206 | +- Do not discharge below **2.5V per cell**
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| 207 | +- Use a **Battery Management System (BMS)** for packs
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| 208 | +
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| 209 | +---
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| 210 | +
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| 211 | +### 4. Avoid Short Circuits
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| 212 | +
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| 213 | +- Do not let battery terminals touch metal objects
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| 214 | +- Use protective holders or cases
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| 215 | +- Handle with care to avoid damaging the cell casing
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| 216 | +
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| 217 | +---
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| 218 | +
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| 219 | +### 5. Prevent Physical Damage
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| 220 | +
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| 221 | +- Avoid dropping, crushing, or puncturing cells
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| 222 | +- Do not expose to extreme temperatures (keep between 0°C and 45°C for charging)
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| 223 | +
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| 224 | +---
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| 225 | +
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| 226 | +### 6. Store Properly
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| 227 | +
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| 228 | +- Store batteries in a **cool, dry place**
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| 229 | +- Keep batteries at around **40-60% charge** for long-term storage
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| 230 | +- Use battery cases to prevent accidental shorts
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| 231 | +
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| 232 | +---
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| 233 | +
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| 234 | +### 7. Monitor Battery Health
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| 235 | +
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| 236 | +- Check for swelling, corrosion, or leaks
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| 237 | +- Dispose of damaged or old batteries safely at designated recycling centers
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| 238 | +
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| 239 | +---
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| 240 | +
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| 241 | +### 8. Use Appropriate Protection Circuits
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| 242 | +
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| 243 | +- For battery packs, use a **BMS** to prevent overcharge, overdischarge, overcurrent, and short circuit
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| 244 | +- Individual protected 18650 cells include an internal **PCM (Protection Circuit Module)**
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| 245 | +
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| 246 | +---
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| 247 | +
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| 248 | +### Summary Table
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| 249 | +
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| 250 | +| Safety Tip | Description |
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| 251 | +|---------------------------|-------------------------------------|
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| 252 | +| Buy quality cells | Avoid counterfeit or low-grade cells |
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| 253 | +| Use correct charger | CC/CV chargers designed for Li-ion |
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| 254 | +| Avoid overcharge/discharge | Charge max 4.2V, discharge min 2.5V |
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| 255 | +| Prevent short circuits | Use protective cases and careful handling |
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| 256 | +| Avoid physical damage | Do not crush, puncture, or overheat |
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| 257 | +| Store at partial charge | 40–60% SOC in cool, dry place |
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| 258 | +| Use BMS/PCM | Protect against electrical faults |
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| 259 | +
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| 260 | +
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| 261 | +
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| 262 | +## how to revive 18650 batteries at 0V
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| 263 | +
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| 264 | +## ✅ Tools You’ll Need
|
|
| 265 | +- Multimeter
|
|
| 266 | +- Smart charger (with 0V recovery mode) *or* TP4056 / bench power supply
|
|
| 267 | +- Optional: Resistor (10–50Ω) for current limiting
|
|
| 268 | +
|
|
| 269 | +### 🔧 Method 1: Smart Charger with 0V Recovery
|
|
| 270 | +Some chargers (e.g., **LiitoKala Lii-500**, **Nitecore**) can automatically revive 0V cells.
|
|
| 271 | +
|
|
| 272 | +#### Steps:
|
|
| 273 | +1. Insert the battery into the charger.
|
|
| 274 | +2. If supported, it will trickle charge until voltage reaches ~3.0V.
|
|
| 275 | +3. Then it continues normal charging.
|
|
| 276 | +4. Monitor temperature and voltage during charging.
|
|
| 277 | +
|
|
| 278 | +> ✅ **Low risk**
|
|
| 279 | +> ✅ **Recommended method**
|
|
| 280 | +> ✅ **High success rate** for mildly over-discharged cells
|
|
| 281 | +
|
|
| 282 | +---
|
|
| 283 | +
|
|
| 284 | +### 🔧 Method 2: Manual Trickle Charge (Bench PSU / TP4056)
|
|
| 285 | +Only attempt if you are **experienced with electronics**.
|
|
| 286 | +
|
|
| 287 | +#### Steps:
|
|
| 288 | +1. Set PSU to **3.0–3.2V**, current limit to **50–100mA**.
|
|
| 289 | +2. Connect positive and negative terminals (double-check polarity!).
|
|
| 290 | +3. Charge slowly until voltage rises to **2.5–3.0V**.
|
|
| 291 | +4. Disconnect and let the cell rest for 10–15 minutes.
|
|
| 292 | +5. If voltage holds, continue charging normally to **4.2V at 500–1000mA**.
|
|
| 293 | +6. If voltage drops again → **discard the cell**.
|
|
| 294 | +
|
|
| 295 | +> ⚠️ **Medium risk**
|
|
| 296 | +> ⚠️ **Requires attention and monitoring**
|
|
| 297 | +
|
|
| 298 | +---
|
|
| 299 | +
|
|
| 300 | +### ✅ After Revival
|
|
| 301 | +Check:
|
|
| 302 | +- 🔋 Voltage stability: Does it stay above 3.0V after rest?
|
|
| 303 | +- 🌡️ Temperature: Any excessive heat during charging or discharging?
|
|
| 304 | +- 🔋 Capacity: Use a charger/tester to measure actual mAh.
|
|
| 305 | +
|
|
| 306 | +---
|
|
| 307 | +
|
|
| 308 | +### ❌ Do NOT Attempt Revival If:
|
|
| 309 | +- Battery is **swollen**, **leaking**, or **rusty**
|
|
| 310 | +- Voltage **does not rise** after 10–20 mins of trickle charge
|
|
| 311 | +- Cell gets **hot quickly** during charging
|
|
| 312 | +
|
|
| 313 | +---
|
|
| 314 | +
|
|
| 315 | +### ♻️ Safe Disposal
|
|
| 316 | +Dispose of dead batteries at **electronics recycling** centers.
|
|
| 317 | +Do **not** throw in regular trash.
|
|
| 318 | +
|
|
| 319 | +---
|
|
| 320 | +
|
|
| 321 | +### 🔄 Summary Table
|
|
| 322 | +
|
|
| 323 | +| Method | Risk Level | Tools Needed | Notes |
|
|
| 324 | +|------------------------|------------|--------------------------|---------------------------------|
|
|
| 325 | +| Smart Charger (0V mode)| ✅ Low | Li-ion charger | Safest and easiest method |
|
|
| 326 | +| Manual Trickle Charge | ⚠️ Medium | Bench PSU or TP4056 | Monitor voltage & temperature |
|
|
| 327 | +| Force-Charge (unsafe) | ❌ High | Not recommended | Risk of fire or explosion |
|
|
| 328 | +
|
|
| 329 | +
|
|
| 330 | +
|
|
| 331 | +
|
|
| 332 | +
|
|
| 333 | +## battery rack
|
|
| 334 | +
|
|
| 335 | +- [[week-4-8-dat]]
|
|
| 336 | +
|
|
| 337 | +## ref
|
|
| 338 | +
|
|
| 339 | +- [[li-battery-dat]] - [[18650-dat]]
|
|
| 340 | +
|
|
| 341 | +- [[18650]]
|
battery-dat/battery-rechargerable-dat/battery-li-dat/battery-li-size-dat/18650-dat/2024-03-29-15-59-09.png
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battery-dat/battery-rechargerable-dat/battery-li-dat/battery-li-size-dat/26650-dat/26650-dat.md
| ... | ... | @@ -0,0 +1,53 @@ |
| 1 | +
|
|
| 2 | +# 26650-dat
|
|
| 3 | +
|
|
| 4 | +- [[battery-capacity-dat]]
|
|
| 5 | +
|
|
| 6 | +## motorbike battery
|
|
| 7 | +
|
|
| 8 | +- 12-14 milliohm internal resistance
|
|
| 9 | +- [[active-battery-balancing-board-dat]]
|
|
| 10 | +- internal 4x2 = 14.5 V
|
|
| 11 | +- 10C / Instant discharge 20C
|
|
| 12 | +
|
|
| 13 | +
|
|
| 14 | +
|
|
| 15 | +
|
|
| 16 | +
|
|
| 17 | +
|
|
| 18 | +
|
|
| 19 | +
|
|
| 20 | +## 1. Overview
|
|
| 21 | +- **26650** = Cylindrical cell, **26 mm diameter**, **65 mm length**.
|
|
| 22 | +- Commonly Li-ion chemistry (LiCoO₂, LiNiMnCo, LiFePO₄, etc.).
|
|
| 23 | +
|
|
| 24 | +## 2. Typical Specs (Li-ion NMC type)
|
|
| 25 | +| Parameter | Common Value Range |
|
|
| 26 | +|------------------------|---------------------------|
|
|
| 27 | +| Nominal Voltage | 3.6–3.7 V |
|
|
| 28 | +| Capacity | 4,000–5,500 mAh |
|
|
| 29 | +| Energy (Wh) | 14.4–20.35 Wh |
|
|
| 30 | +
|
|
| 31 | +> **Energy formula**:
|
|
| 32 | +> `Energy (Wh) = Nominal Voltage × Capacity (Ah)`
|
|
| 33 | +
|
|
| 34 | +Example:
|
|
| 35 | +- 5000 mAh (5.0 Ah) × 3.65 V ≈ **18.25 Wh**
|
|
| 36 | +
|
|
| 37 | +## 3. LiFePO₄ 26650 Variant
|
|
| 38 | +| Parameter | Common Value Range |
|
|
| 39 | +|------------------------|---------------------------|
|
|
| 40 | +| Nominal Voltage | 3.2–3.3 V |
|
|
| 41 | +| Capacity | 3,000–3,500 mAh |
|
|
| 42 | +| Energy (Wh) | 9.6–11.55 Wh |
|
|
| 43 | +
|
|
| 44 | +## 4. Summary
|
|
| 45 | +- **NMC/NCA Li-ion 26650**: ~18 Wh typical.
|
|
| 46 | +- **LiFePO₄ 26650**: ~10 Wh typical.
|
|
| 47 | +- Actual usable energy is slightly less due to discharge cut-off and efficiency losses.
|
|
| 48 | +
|
|
| 49 | +
|
|
| 50 | +
|
|
| 51 | +## ref
|
|
| 52 | +
|
|
| 53 | +- [[26650-lithium-battery]] - [[li-battery-size]] - [[lithium-battery]] |
|
| ... | ... | \ No newline at end of file |
battery-dat/battery-rechargerable-dat/battery-li-dat/battery-li-size-dat/32125-dat/32125-dat.md
| ... | ... | @@ -0,0 +1,20 @@ |
| 1 | +
|
|
| 2 | +# 32125-dat
|
|
| 3 | +
|
|
| 4 | +**32125 Li Battery**
|
|
| 5 | +
|
|
| 6 | +- **Meaning of "32125":**
|
|
| 7 | + - **32** → Diameter ≈ 32 mm
|
|
| 8 | + - **125** → Length ≈ 125 mm
|
|
| 9 | + - **Format** → Cylindrical lithium-ion cell
|
|
| 10 | +
|
|
| 11 | +- **Type:**
|
|
| 12 | + - Typically a **LiFePO₄ (Lithium Iron Phosphate)** cylindrical cell
|
|
| 13 | +
|
|
| 14 | +- **Common Specs:**
|
|
| 15 | + - Nominal Voltage: 3.2 V
|
|
| 16 | + - Capacity: ~6,000 – 8,000 mAh (varies by manufacturer)
|
|
| 17 | + - High cycle life, safer chemistry compared to other Li-ion cells
|
|
| 18 | +
|
|
| 19 | +- **Applications:**
|
|
| 20 | + - Battery packs for **energy storage systems**, **EVs**, **electric tools**, and **solar storage**
|
battery-dat/battery-rechargerable-dat/battery-li-dat/battery-li-size-dat/battery-li-size-dat.md
| ... | ... | @@ -0,0 +1,32 @@ |
| 1 | +
|
|
| 2 | +# li-battery-size-dat
|
|
| 3 | +
|
|
| 4 | +
|
|
| 5 | +- [[soldering-tools-spot-welding-dat]]
|
|
| 6 | +
|
|
| 7 | +- [[32125-dat]]
|
|
| 8 | +
|
|
| 9 | +
|
|
| 10 | +- [[18650-dat]] - [[21700-dat]] - [[26650-dat]] - [[32650-dat]] - [[32700-dat]] - [[A123-battery-dat]] - [[LFP-battery-dat]] - [[LTO-battery-dat]] - [[LTO-18650-battery-dat]] - [[LTO-26650-battery-dat]] - [[LTO-32700-battery-dat]] - [[LTO-32650-battery-dat]]
|
|
| 11 | +
|
|
| 12 | +
|
|
| 13 | +- [[38120-dat]]
|
|
| 14 | +
|
|
| 15 | +
|
|
| 16 | +
|
|
| 17 | +
|
|
| 18 | +
|
|
| 19 | +- [[pouch-battery-dat]]
|
|
| 20 | +
|
|
| 21 | +
|
|
| 22 | +- 21700: 21mm diameter, 70mm length. Increasingly popular, offering higher capacity than 18650.
|
|
| 23 | +- 26650: 26mm diameter, 65mm length. Larger capacity and often higher discharge current capability than 18650.
|
|
| 24 | +- 14500: 14mm diameter, 50mm length. Same physical size as a standard AA battery.
|
|
| 25 | +- 16340: 16mm diameter, 34mm length. Same physical size as a CR123A battery.
|
|
| 26 | +- 10440: 10mm diameter, 44mm length. Same physical size as a standard AAA battery.
|
|
| 27 | +- `32650` / `32700`: 32mm diameter, 65mm or 70mm length. Often used for LiFePO4 chemistry, providing high power and capacity.
|
|
| 28 | +
|
|
| 29 | +
|
|
| 30 | +## ref
|
|
| 31 | +
|
|
| 32 | +- [[18650]] |
|
| ... | ... | \ No newline at end of file |
battery-dat/battery-rechargerable-dat/battery-li-dat/battery-li-size-dat/pouch-battery-dat/2025-02-21-15-06-43.png
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battery-dat/battery-rechargerable-dat/battery-li-dat/battery-li-size-dat/pouch-battery-dat/pouch-battery-dat.md
| ... | ... | @@ -0,0 +1,73 @@ |
| 1 | +
|
|
| 2 | +# pouch-battery-dat
|
|
| 3 | +
|
|
| 4 | +
|
|
| 5 | +
|
|
| 6 | +
|
|
| 7 | +
|
|
| 8 | +## **Characteristics of Pouch Batteries**
|
|
| 9 | +1. **Lightweight Design**
|
|
| 10 | + - Uses **aluminum-plastic film**, making it lighter than metal-cased batteries.
|
|
| 11 | +2. **High Energy Density**
|
|
| 12 | + - Pouch batteries have **10%-15% higher volumetric energy density** than prismatic and cylindrical batteries, ideal for long-range applications.
|
|
| 13 | +3. **Better Safety**
|
|
| 14 | + - In case of damage, pouch batteries **swell and vent gas instead of exploding**, making them safer than cylindrical cells.
|
|
| 15 | +4. **Flexible Shape and Size**
|
|
| 16 | + - Can be **customized to fit different device designs**, making them ideal for **compact electronic devices and high-end EVs**.
|
|
| 17 | +5. **Lower Mechanical Strength**
|
|
| 18 | + - The **soft casing is more prone to damage** and requires additional structural protection.
|
|
| 19 | +6. **Higher Production Cost**
|
|
| 20 | + - Manufacturing is **more complex and expensive** than cylindrical or prismatic cells.
|
|
| 21 | +
|
|
| 22 | +---
|
|
| 23 | +
|
|
| 24 | +## **Pouch vs. Cylindrical vs. Prismatic Batteries**
|
|
| 25 | +| **Type** | **Casing Material** | **Energy Density** | **Safety** | **Weight** | **Applications** |
|
|
| 26 | +|---------|----------------|----------------|------------|--------|----------------|
|
|
| 27 | +| **Pouch Battery** | Aluminum-plastic film | **Highest** | High (Swells instead of exploding) | **Lightest** | **High-end EVs, smartphones, laptops, drones** |
|
|
| 28 | +| **Cylindrical Battery (18650/21700)** | Stainless steel shell | Medium | Medium (Has safety valves) | Heavy | **EVs (Tesla), laptops, power tools** |
|
|
| 29 | +| **Prismatic Battery** | Aluminum or steel case | High | Medium (Rigid structure) | Medium | **EVs, energy storage systems** |
|
|
| 30 | +
|
|
| 31 | +---
|
|
| 32 | +
|
|
| 33 | +## **Applications of Pouch Batteries**
|
|
| 34 | +1. **Electric Vehicles (EVs)**
|
|
| 35 | + - Used by **BYD, NIO, Hyundai, BMW**, and other manufacturers.
|
|
| 36 | +2. **Consumer Electronics**
|
|
| 37 | + - Common in **smartphones, laptops, tablets**, and other portable devices.
|
|
| 38 | +3. **Energy Storage Systems**
|
|
| 39 | + - Some **home and commercial energy storage systems** use pouch batteries for higher energy density.
|
|
| 40 | +4. **Drones & E-Mobility**
|
|
| 41 | + - Due to their **lightweight design**, pouch batteries are preferred for **drones, e-skateboards, and lightweight EVs**.
|
|
| 42 | +
|
|
| 43 | +---
|
|
| 44 | +
|
|
| 45 | +## **Future Trends**
|
|
| 46 | +- **High-Nickel Chemistry** (Improving energy density, reducing cobalt usage)
|
|
| 47 | +- **Solid-State Batteries** (Enhancing safety and increasing energy capacity)
|
|
| 48 | +- **Recycling & Sustainability** (Reducing environmental impact and improving recyclability)
|
|
| 49 | +
|
|
| 50 | +---
|
|
| 51 | +
|
|
| 52 | +## Soft-pack (pouch) battery
|
|
| 53 | +
|
|
| 54 | +
|
|
| 55 | +A Soft-pack Pouch Lithium Battery (or Pouch-type Lithium Battery) refers to a specific form factor of Lithium-ion or Lithium-Polymer (Li-Poly) batteries that is encased in a flexible, soft pouch made of materials like aluminum foil. This type of battery is typically lighter and more compact compared to cylindrical cells (like 18650) or prismatic cells, and it offers certain advantages in terms of flexibility, form factor, and space efficiency.
|
|
| 56 | +
|
|
| 57 | +1. Good safety performance:
|
|
| 58 | +
|
|
| 59 | +The soft packing battery does not cause an explosion accident as like the steel shell battery or aluminum shell battery. Generally, in the case of a safety hazard, the outer casing will only bulge at most.
|
|
| 60 | +
|
|
| 61 | +2. Small size, light weight, high energy:
|
|
| 62 | +
|
|
| 63 | +in terms of weight, the soft pack battery is 40% lighter than the equivalent capacity of the steel casing lithium battery, and 20% lighter than the aluminum casing battery. In terms of capacity, the soft-pack lithium battery is 10-15% higher than the steel casing battery of the same specification scale, and 5-10% higher than the aluminum casing battery.
|
|
| 64 | +
|
|
| 65 | +3. The internal resistance is small:
|
|
| 66 | +
|
|
| 67 | +We all know that the lithium battery itself will have an inevitable self-discharge reaction, and the greater the internal resistance, the more intense the self-discharge. Relatively speaking, the internal resistance of the soft-pack lithium battery is small, which greatly reduces the self-consumption of the battery.
|
|
| 68 | +
|
|
| 69 | +4. Flexible planning:
|
|
| 70 | +
|
|
| 71 | +the shape of the soft pack battery can be determined by specific business needs, customized planning according to the detailed dimensions of the battery box, perhaps through a variety of battery arrangements to achieve full use of the internal space of the battery box, to meet Differentiated needs.
|
|
| 72 | +
|
|
| 73 | + |
|
| ... | ... | \ No newline at end of file |
battery-dat/battery-rechargerable-dat/battery-li-dat/li-battery-size-dat/18650-dat/18650-0V-dat.md
| ... | ... | @@ -1,60 +0,0 @@ |
| 1 | - |
|
| 2 | -# 18650-0V-dat.md |
|
| 3 | - |
|
| 4 | -A Li-ion cell showing **0 V** usually means something seriously wrong. |
|
| 5 | -Two main causes: |
|
| 6 | - |
|
| 7 | ---- |
|
| 8 | - |
|
| 9 | -## 1. **Protection Circuit Tripped** (Only for “protected 18650”) |
|
| 10 | -Some 18650 cells include a tiny PCB at the bottom. |
|
| 11 | -If the cell is over-discharged, the protection board **disconnects** the output → terminal voltage reads nearly **0 V**. |
|
| 12 | - |
|
| 13 | -- Internal cell voltage is usually still **1–2 V**, not truly 0 V. |
|
| 14 | -- Only applies if your cell is a **protected** 18650. |
|
| 15 | - |
|
| 16 | ---- |
|
| 17 | - |
|
| 18 | -## 2. **Cell Is Internally Damaged** (Most common) |
|
| 19 | -A fully unprotected or old 18650 can reach 0 V if: |
|
| 20 | - |
|
| 21 | -- Severe over-discharge |
|
| 22 | -- Internal chemical breakdown |
|
| 23 | -- Internal short circuit |
|
| 24 | -- Copper plating inside |
|
| 25 | -- Safety vent (pressure valve) triggered |
|
| 26 | - |
|
| 27 | -If the safety vent opens, the cell is **permanently unsafe**. |
|
| 28 | - |
|
| 29 | -**True 0 V = the cell is dead.** |
|
| 30 | - |
|
| 31 | ---- |
|
| 32 | - |
|
| 33 | -# ⚠️ Can You “Fix” a 0 V 18650? |
|
| 34 | -**No. Not safely.** |
|
| 35 | -Trying to recharge a 0 V Li-ion can cause: |
|
| 36 | - |
|
| 37 | -- Fire |
|
| 38 | -- Venting hot gas |
|
| 39 | -- Explosion |
|
| 40 | -- Thermal runaway |
|
| 41 | - |
|
| 42 | -Even trained engineers only attempt recovery in fireproof labs. |
|
| 43 | - |
|
| 44 | -**For home use: |
|
| 45 | -0 V = NOT repairable.** |
|
| 46 | - |
|
| 47 | ---- |
|
| 48 | - |
|
| 49 | -# ✔️ What You Should Do |
|
| 50 | -- Do **NOT** charge it. |
|
| 51 | -- Do **NOT** heat, hammer, or puncture it. |
|
| 52 | -- Recycle it at an **e-waste / battery recycling point**. |
|
| 53 | - |
|
| 54 | -This is the only safe option. |
|
| 55 | - |
|
| 56 | - |
|
| 57 | - |
|
| 58 | -## ref |
|
| 59 | - |
|
| 60 | -- [[18650-dat]] |
|
| ... | ... | \ No newline at end of file |
battery-dat/battery-rechargerable-dat/battery-li-dat/li-battery-size-dat/18650-dat/18650-dat.md
| ... | ... | @@ -1,341 +0,0 @@ |
| 1 | - |
|
| 2 | -# 18650-dat |
|
| 3 | - |
|
| 4 | - |
|
| 5 | - |
|
| 6 | - |
|
| 7 | - |
|
| 8 | -18mm x 65mm |
|
| 9 | - |
|
| 10 | - |
|
| 11 | - |
|
| 12 | -- [[18650-battery-holder-dat]] |
|
| 13 | - |
|
| 14 | -- [[18650-0V-dat]] |
|
| 15 | - |
|
| 16 | -## discharge current |
|
| 17 | - |
|
| 18 | -### 🔧 Typical Discharge Ratings by Category |
|
| 19 | - |
|
| 20 | -| **Category** | **Examples** | **Max Continuous Discharge** | **Notes** | |
|
| 21 | -|--------------------------|--------------------------|-------------------------------|-------------------------------------------| |
|
| 22 | -| **Standard Energy Cells** | Panasonic NCR18650B | 2A–3A | High capacity (up to 3400mAh), low drain | |
|
| 23 | -| | LG MJ1, Samsung 35E | 5A | Up to ~3500mAh | |
|
| 24 | -| **Balanced Cells** | Samsung 30Q, LG HG2 | 10A–15A | Good mix of capacity (3000mAh) and power | |
|
| 25 | -| **High-Drain Cells** | Sony VTC6, Molicel P26A | 20A | Often 2600–3000mAh | |
|
| 26 | -| **Extreme High-Drain** | Sony VTC5A, Molicel P28A | 25A–30A | Used in power tools, e-skates, vaping | |
|
| 27 | - |
|
| 28 | ---- |
|
| 29 | - |
|
| 30 | -### 📌 Notes |
|
| 31 | - |
|
| 32 | -- **Pulse current** (short bursts) may be 1.5–2× the continuous rating. |
|
| 33 | -- Always check **manufacturer datasheet** for: |
|
| 34 | - - Continuous discharge current |
|
| 35 | - - Pulse current (duration & cooldown) |
|
| 36 | - - Required cooling |
|
| 37 | -- Actual safe discharge also depends on: |
|
| 38 | - - Temperature |
|
| 39 | - - Battery aging |
|
| 40 | - - Internal resistance |
|
| 41 | - |
|
| 42 | ---- |
|
| 43 | - |
|
| 44 | -### ⚠️ Warning |
|
| 45 | - |
|
| 46 | -Using a cell above its rated discharge current may: |
|
| 47 | -- Cause overheating or thermal runaway |
|
| 48 | -- Reduce lifespan drastically |
|
| 49 | -- Trigger BMS protection or cause fire risk |
|
| 50 | - |
|
| 51 | ---- |
|
| 52 | - |
|
| 53 | -### ✅ Recommended Use |
|
| 54 | - |
|
| 55 | -| **Application** | **Recommended Cell Type** | |
|
| 56 | -|-----------------------|---------------------------------| |
|
| 57 | -| Flashlights, DIY packs | Standard or balanced (5A–10A) | |
|
| 58 | -| E-bikes, e-scooters | High-drain (15A–30A) | |
|
| 59 | -| Power tools, drones | High to extreme high-drain | |
|
| 60 | - |
|
| 61 | - |
|
| 62 | - |
|
| 63 | -## 14500 vs 18650 vs 21700 batteries |
|
| 64 | - |
|
| 65 | -| Feature | AA Size Lithium (14500) | 18650 Lithium-Ion | 21700 Lithium-Ion | |
|
| 66 | -| ---------------------------- | -------------------------- | --------------------------- | ------------------------- | |
|
| 67 | -| **Typical Size (mm)** | 14 x 50 | 18 x 65 | 21 x 70 | |
|
| 68 | -| **Nominal Voltage** | 3.7V | 3.6V – 3.7V | 3.6V – 3.7V | |
|
| 69 | -| **Capacity Range** | 500 – 800 mAh | 1800 – 3500 mAh | 4000 – 5000+ mAh | |
|
| 70 | -| **Max Continuous Discharge** | 1 – 3A | 5 – 20A | 10 – 35A | |
|
| 71 | -| **Common C-Rate** | 1C – 3C | 1C – 10C | 1C – 10C+ | |
|
| 72 | -| **Rechargeable** | Yes | Yes | Yes | |
|
| 73 | -| **Common Use Cases** | Small flashlights, sensors | Laptops, power tools, vapes | EVs, e-bikes, power tools | |
|
| 74 | -| **Weight (approx.)** | ~20g | ~45g | ~70g | |
|
| 75 | -| **Energy Density** | Low – Medium | Medium | High | |
|
| 76 | - |
|
| 77 | - |
|
| 78 | - |
|
| 79 | - |
|
| 80 | -## **18650 Battery Types** |
|
| 81 | - |
|
| 82 | -| **Type** | **Main Composition** | **Features** | **Applications** | |
|
| 83 | -| --------------------------------- | ------------------------------------------------ | ------------------------------------------------ | --------------------------------------- | |
|
| 84 | -| **NCM/NCA** | Nickel-Cobalt-Manganese / Nickel-Cobalt-Aluminum | High energy density, medium safety | EVs (Tesla Model S/X), laptop batteries | |
|
| 85 | -| **LFP (Lithium Iron Phosphate)** | Lithium Iron Phosphate | Long lifespan, high safety, lower energy density | Energy storage, power tools, e-bikes | |
|
| 86 | -| **LCO (Lithium Cobalt Oxide)** | Lithium Cobalt Oxide | High energy density, shorter lifespan | Laptops, battery packs | |
|
| 87 | -| **IMR (Lithium Manganese Oxide)** | Lithium Manganese Oxide | High discharge rate, heat resistance | High-power flashlights, vaping devices | |
|
| 88 | - |
|
| 89 | ---- |
|
| 90 | - |
|
| 91 | -## **18650 vs. 21700 Batteries** |
|
| 92 | -| **Model** | **Size** | **Energy Density** | **Common Uses** | |
|
| 93 | -| --------- | ---------- | ------------------ | ------------------------------- | |
|
| 94 | -| **18650** | 18 × 65 mm | 2000 – 3500mAh | Laptops, EVs, tools | |
|
| 95 | -| **21700** | 21 × 70 mm | 4000 – 5000mAh | Tesla batteries, energy storage | |
|
| 96 | - |
|
| 97 | -Tesla originally used **18650 batteries** in **Model S/X** but later switched to **21700** for **Model 3/Y** and is now moving towards **4680** cells for higher efficiency. |
|
| 98 | - |
|
| 99 | - |
|
| 100 | -The 18650 battery should fall under the Lithium-ion Battery category, as it is a specific form factor of the lithium-ion battery, commonly used in applications such as laptops, power tools, flashlights, and electric vehicles. |
|
| 101 | - |
|
| 102 | -## safety concern |
|
| 103 | - |
|
| 104 | -After 30 years of development, the preparation process of 18650 battery has been very mature. In addition to the great improvement in performance, its safety is also perfect. |
|
| 105 | - |
|
| 106 | -To prevent the metal casing from exploding, the battery is now fitted with a safety valve at the top. The safety valve is now a standard part of every 18650 Li-ion battery and is the most important barrier. When the pressure inside the cell becomes too high, the top safety valve opens to vent and depressurize, preventing an explosion. |
|
| 107 | - |
|
| 108 | -However, when the safety valve is open, chemicals leaking from inside the battery can react with oxygen in the air at high temperatures and still cause a fire. |
|
| 109 | - |
|
| 110 | -In addition, most 18650 batteries now also come with their own protection panel with overcharge and overdischarge and short circuit protection, which has high safety performance. |
|
| 111 | - |
|
| 112 | -- [[battery-protection-dat]] |
|
| 113 | - |
|
| 114 | - |
|
| 115 | -## CID safety |
|
| 116 | - |
|
| 117 | -The CID (Current Interrupt Device) in an 18650 battery is a safety feature designed to prevent overheating and potential hazards. If the internal pressure of the battery gets too high (usually due to overcharging or overheating), the CID disconnects the circuit, stopping the current flow to prevent a dangerous situation, such as thermal runaway or explosion. |
|
| 118 | - |
|
| 119 | -Each manufacturer might have slightly different specifications, but the CID is a common safety component in lithium-ion batteries, especially in high-capacity cells like the 18650. |
|
| 120 | - |
|
| 121 | - |
|
| 122 | -### CID reset trick |
|
| 123 | - |
|
| 124 | -- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IhUtKvCV6fs&ab_channel=WalamusPrime |
|
| 125 | - |
|
| 126 | - |
|
| 127 | - |
|
| 128 | -### 🔒 What is CID Safety for 18650 Batteries? |
|
| 129 | - |
|
| 130 | -#### What is CID? |
|
| 131 | - |
|
| 132 | -- **CID** stands for **Current Interrupt Device**. |
|
| 133 | -- It is a **built-in safety mechanism** inside many 18650 lithium-ion cells. |
|
| 134 | -- Designed to **prevent dangerous overpressure and overheating**. |
|
| 135 | - |
|
| 136 | ---- |
|
| 137 | - |
|
| 138 | -#### How Does CID Work? |
|
| 139 | - |
|
| 140 | -- The CID is a **pressure-sensitive switch** inside the cell. |
|
| 141 | -- When internal gas pressure rises above a certain threshold (due to: |
|
| 142 | - - Overcharging, |
|
| 143 | - - Short circuit, |
|
| 144 | - - Thermal runaway), |
|
| 145 | - |
|
| 146 | - the CID **disconnects the internal current path**. |
|
| 147 | -- This **interrupts current flow**, effectively stopping the battery from further charging or discharging. |
|
| 148 | -- It **helps prevent cell rupture, fire, or explosion**. |
|
| 149 | - |
|
| 150 | ---- |
|
| 151 | - |
|
| 152 | -#### Why Is CID Important? |
|
| 153 | - |
|
| 154 | -- Lithium-ion cells generate gas if damaged or overcharged. |
|
| 155 | -- Pressure build-up can cause catastrophic failure. |
|
| 156 | -- CID acts as a **last-resort safety valve** inside the cell. |
|
| 157 | -- It **works alongside external protection circuits and BMS**. |
|
| 158 | - |
|
| 159 | ---- |
|
| 160 | - |
|
| 161 | -#### Summary Table |
|
| 162 | - |
|
| 163 | -| Feature | Description | |
|
| 164 | -|-----------------------|------------------------------------------------| |
|
| 165 | -| Purpose | Prevent overpressure and overheating | |
|
| 166 | -| Mechanism | Pressure-activated internal switch | |
|
| 167 | -| Activation Threshold | Specific pressure level inside the cell | |
|
| 168 | -| Effect | Interrupts internal circuit to stop current flow | |
|
| 169 | -| Role | Safety backup inside individual 18650 cells | |
|
| 170 | - |
|
| 171 | ---- |
|
| 172 | - |
|
| 173 | -#### Important Notes |
|
| 174 | - |
|
| 175 | -- CID **does not reset** after activation; cell is permanently disabled. |
|
| 176 | -- Cells with CID still **require external protection** (BMS). |
|
| 177 | -- Not all lithium cells have CID — mostly found in high-quality 18650s. |
|
| 178 | - |
|
| 179 | -### short test |
|
| 180 | - |
|
| 181 | -- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bKQzfrO6WBA&ab_channel=EngineerX |
|
| 182 | -- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AUMiSk1D4Xg&ab_channel=DIYTech%26Repairs |
|
| 183 | - |
|
| 184 | - |
|
| 185 | -## 🔋 How to Use 18650 Batteries Safely |
|
| 186 | - |
|
| 187 | -### 1. Choose Quality Batteries |
|
| 188 | - |
|
| 189 | -- Buy from **reputable brands** (Panasonic, Samsung, LG, Sony, Molicel) |
|
| 190 | -- Avoid cheap or counterfeit cells |
|
| 191 | -- Check for **safety features** like CID and PCM |
|
| 192 | - |
|
| 193 | ---- |
|
| 194 | - |
|
| 195 | -### 2. Use Proper Chargers |
|
| 196 | - |
|
| 197 | -- Use a charger designed for **Li-ion 18650 cells** |
|
| 198 | -- Prefer chargers with **constant current / constant voltage (CC/CV)** charging profile |
|
| 199 | -- Avoid using chargers designed for other chemistries |
|
| 200 | - |
|
| 201 | ---- |
|
| 202 | - |
|
| 203 | -### 3. Never Overcharge or Overdischarge |
|
| 204 | - |
|
| 205 | -- Do not charge above **4.2V per cell** |
|
| 206 | -- Do not discharge below **2.5V per cell** |
|
| 207 | -- Use a **Battery Management System (BMS)** for packs |
|
| 208 | - |
|
| 209 | ---- |
|
| 210 | - |
|
| 211 | -### 4. Avoid Short Circuits |
|
| 212 | - |
|
| 213 | -- Do not let battery terminals touch metal objects |
|
| 214 | -- Use protective holders or cases |
|
| 215 | -- Handle with care to avoid damaging the cell casing |
|
| 216 | - |
|
| 217 | ---- |
|
| 218 | - |
|
| 219 | -### 5. Prevent Physical Damage |
|
| 220 | - |
|
| 221 | -- Avoid dropping, crushing, or puncturing cells |
|
| 222 | -- Do not expose to extreme temperatures (keep between 0°C and 45°C for charging) |
|
| 223 | - |
|
| 224 | ---- |
|
| 225 | - |
|
| 226 | -### 6. Store Properly |
|
| 227 | - |
|
| 228 | -- Store batteries in a **cool, dry place** |
|
| 229 | -- Keep batteries at around **40-60% charge** for long-term storage |
|
| 230 | -- Use battery cases to prevent accidental shorts |
|
| 231 | - |
|
| 232 | ---- |
|
| 233 | - |
|
| 234 | -### 7. Monitor Battery Health |
|
| 235 | - |
|
| 236 | -- Check for swelling, corrosion, or leaks |
|
| 237 | -- Dispose of damaged or old batteries safely at designated recycling centers |
|
| 238 | - |
|
| 239 | ---- |
|
| 240 | - |
|
| 241 | -### 8. Use Appropriate Protection Circuits |
|
| 242 | - |
|
| 243 | -- For battery packs, use a **BMS** to prevent overcharge, overdischarge, overcurrent, and short circuit |
|
| 244 | -- Individual protected 18650 cells include an internal **PCM (Protection Circuit Module)** |
|
| 245 | - |
|
| 246 | ---- |
|
| 247 | - |
|
| 248 | -### Summary Table |
|
| 249 | - |
|
| 250 | -| Safety Tip | Description | |
|
| 251 | -|---------------------------|-------------------------------------| |
|
| 252 | -| Buy quality cells | Avoid counterfeit or low-grade cells | |
|
| 253 | -| Use correct charger | CC/CV chargers designed for Li-ion | |
|
| 254 | -| Avoid overcharge/discharge | Charge max 4.2V, discharge min 2.5V | |
|
| 255 | -| Prevent short circuits | Use protective cases and careful handling | |
|
| 256 | -| Avoid physical damage | Do not crush, puncture, or overheat | |
|
| 257 | -| Store at partial charge | 40–60% SOC in cool, dry place | |
|
| 258 | -| Use BMS/PCM | Protect against electrical faults | |
|
| 259 | - |
|
| 260 | - |
|
| 261 | - |
|
| 262 | -## how to revive 18650 batteries at 0V |
|
| 263 | - |
|
| 264 | -## ✅ Tools You’ll Need |
|
| 265 | -- Multimeter |
|
| 266 | -- Smart charger (with 0V recovery mode) *or* TP4056 / bench power supply |
|
| 267 | -- Optional: Resistor (10–50Ω) for current limiting |
|
| 268 | - |
|
| 269 | -### 🔧 Method 1: Smart Charger with 0V Recovery |
|
| 270 | -Some chargers (e.g., **LiitoKala Lii-500**, **Nitecore**) can automatically revive 0V cells. |
|
| 271 | - |
|
| 272 | -#### Steps: |
|
| 273 | -1. Insert the battery into the charger. |
|
| 274 | -2. If supported, it will trickle charge until voltage reaches ~3.0V. |
|
| 275 | -3. Then it continues normal charging. |
|
| 276 | -4. Monitor temperature and voltage during charging. |
|
| 277 | - |
|
| 278 | -> ✅ **Low risk** |
|
| 279 | -> ✅ **Recommended method** |
|
| 280 | -> ✅ **High success rate** for mildly over-discharged cells |
|
| 281 | - |
|
| 282 | ---- |
|
| 283 | - |
|
| 284 | -### 🔧 Method 2: Manual Trickle Charge (Bench PSU / TP4056) |
|
| 285 | -Only attempt if you are **experienced with electronics**. |
|
| 286 | - |
|
| 287 | -#### Steps: |
|
| 288 | -1. Set PSU to **3.0–3.2V**, current limit to **50–100mA**. |
|
| 289 | -2. Connect positive and negative terminals (double-check polarity!). |
|
| 290 | -3. Charge slowly until voltage rises to **2.5–3.0V**. |
|
| 291 | -4. Disconnect and let the cell rest for 10–15 minutes. |
|
| 292 | -5. If voltage holds, continue charging normally to **4.2V at 500–1000mA**. |
|
| 293 | -6. If voltage drops again → **discard the cell**. |
|
| 294 | - |
|
| 295 | -> ⚠️ **Medium risk** |
|
| 296 | -> ⚠️ **Requires attention and monitoring** |
|
| 297 | - |
|
| 298 | ---- |
|
| 299 | - |
|
| 300 | -### ✅ After Revival |
|
| 301 | -Check: |
|
| 302 | -- 🔋 Voltage stability: Does it stay above 3.0V after rest? |
|
| 303 | -- 🌡️ Temperature: Any excessive heat during charging or discharging? |
|
| 304 | -- 🔋 Capacity: Use a charger/tester to measure actual mAh. |
|
| 305 | - |
|
| 306 | ---- |
|
| 307 | - |
|
| 308 | -### ❌ Do NOT Attempt Revival If: |
|
| 309 | -- Battery is **swollen**, **leaking**, or **rusty** |
|
| 310 | -- Voltage **does not rise** after 10–20 mins of trickle charge |
|
| 311 | -- Cell gets **hot quickly** during charging |
|
| 312 | - |
|
| 313 | ---- |
|
| 314 | - |
|
| 315 | -### ♻️ Safe Disposal |
|
| 316 | -Dispose of dead batteries at **electronics recycling** centers. |
|
| 317 | -Do **not** throw in regular trash. |
|
| 318 | - |
|
| 319 | ---- |
|
| 320 | - |
|
| 321 | -### 🔄 Summary Table |
|
| 322 | - |
|
| 323 | -| Method | Risk Level | Tools Needed | Notes | |
|
| 324 | -|------------------------|------------|--------------------------|---------------------------------| |
|
| 325 | -| Smart Charger (0V mode)| ✅ Low | Li-ion charger | Safest and easiest method | |
|
| 326 | -| Manual Trickle Charge | ⚠️ Medium | Bench PSU or TP4056 | Monitor voltage & temperature | |
|
| 327 | -| Force-Charge (unsafe) | ❌ High | Not recommended | Risk of fire or explosion | |
|
| 328 | - |
|
| 329 | - |
|
| 330 | - |
|
| 331 | - |
|
| 332 | - |
|
| 333 | -## battery rack |
|
| 334 | - |
|
| 335 | -- [[week-4-8-dat]] |
|
| 336 | - |
|
| 337 | -## ref |
|
| 338 | - |
|
| 339 | -- [[li-battery-dat]] - [[18650-dat]] |
|
| 340 | - |
|
| 341 | -- [[18650]] |
battery-dat/battery-rechargerable-dat/battery-li-dat/li-battery-size-dat/18650-dat/2024-03-29-15-59-09.png
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battery-dat/battery-rechargerable-dat/battery-li-dat/li-battery-size-dat/26650-dat/2025-05-08-01-12-15.png
| ... | ... | Binary files a/battery-dat/battery-rechargerable-dat/battery-li-dat/li-battery-size-dat/26650-dat/2025-05-08-01-12-15.png and /dev/null differ |
battery-dat/battery-rechargerable-dat/battery-li-dat/li-battery-size-dat/26650-dat/2025-05-08-01-12-27.png
| ... | ... | Binary files a/battery-dat/battery-rechargerable-dat/battery-li-dat/li-battery-size-dat/26650-dat/2025-05-08-01-12-27.png and /dev/null differ |
battery-dat/battery-rechargerable-dat/battery-li-dat/li-battery-size-dat/26650-dat/26650-dat.md
| ... | ... | @@ -1,53 +0,0 @@ |
| 1 | - |
|
| 2 | -# 26650-dat |
|
| 3 | - |
|
| 4 | -- [[battery-capacity-dat]] |
|
| 5 | - |
|
| 6 | -## motorbike battery |
|
| 7 | - |
|
| 8 | -- 12-14 milliohm internal resistance |
|
| 9 | -- [[active-battery-balancing-board-dat]] |
|
| 10 | -- internal 4x2 = 14.5 V |
|
| 11 | -- 10C / Instant discharge 20C |
|
| 12 | - |
|
| 13 | - |
|
| 14 | - |
|
| 15 | - |
|
| 16 | - |
|
| 17 | - |
|
| 18 | - |
|
| 19 | - |
|
| 20 | -## 1. Overview |
|
| 21 | -- **26650** = Cylindrical cell, **26 mm diameter**, **65 mm length**. |
|
| 22 | -- Commonly Li-ion chemistry (LiCoO₂, LiNiMnCo, LiFePO₄, etc.). |
|
| 23 | - |
|
| 24 | -## 2. Typical Specs (Li-ion NMC type) |
|
| 25 | -| Parameter | Common Value Range | |
|
| 26 | -|------------------------|---------------------------| |
|
| 27 | -| Nominal Voltage | 3.6–3.7 V | |
|
| 28 | -| Capacity | 4,000–5,500 mAh | |
|
| 29 | -| Energy (Wh) | 14.4–20.35 Wh | |
|
| 30 | - |
|
| 31 | -> **Energy formula**: |
|
| 32 | -> `Energy (Wh) = Nominal Voltage × Capacity (Ah)` |
|
| 33 | - |
|
| 34 | -Example: |
|
| 35 | -- 5000 mAh (5.0 Ah) × 3.65 V ≈ **18.25 Wh** |
|
| 36 | - |
|
| 37 | -## 3. LiFePO₄ 26650 Variant |
|
| 38 | -| Parameter | Common Value Range | |
|
| 39 | -|------------------------|---------------------------| |
|
| 40 | -| Nominal Voltage | 3.2–3.3 V | |
|
| 41 | -| Capacity | 3,000–3,500 mAh | |
|
| 42 | -| Energy (Wh) | 9.6–11.55 Wh | |
|
| 43 | - |
|
| 44 | -## 4. Summary |
|
| 45 | -- **NMC/NCA Li-ion 26650**: ~18 Wh typical. |
|
| 46 | -- **LiFePO₄ 26650**: ~10 Wh typical. |
|
| 47 | -- Actual usable energy is slightly less due to discharge cut-off and efficiency losses. |
|
| 48 | - |
|
| 49 | - |
|
| 50 | - |
|
| 51 | -## ref |
|
| 52 | - |
|
| 53 | -- [[26650-lithium-battery]] - [[li-battery-size]] - [[lithium-battery]] |
|
| ... | ... | \ No newline at end of file |
battery-dat/battery-rechargerable-dat/battery-li-dat/li-battery-size-dat/32125-dat/32125-dat.md
| ... | ... | @@ -1,20 +0,0 @@ |
| 1 | - |
|
| 2 | -# 32125-dat |
|
| 3 | - |
|
| 4 | -**32125 Li Battery** |
|
| 5 | - |
|
| 6 | -- **Meaning of "32125":** |
|
| 7 | - - **32** → Diameter ≈ 32 mm |
|
| 8 | - - **125** → Length ≈ 125 mm |
|
| 9 | - - **Format** → Cylindrical lithium-ion cell |
|
| 10 | - |
|
| 11 | -- **Type:** |
|
| 12 | - - Typically a **LiFePO₄ (Lithium Iron Phosphate)** cylindrical cell |
|
| 13 | - |
|
| 14 | -- **Common Specs:** |
|
| 15 | - - Nominal Voltage: 3.2 V |
|
| 16 | - - Capacity: ~6,000 – 8,000 mAh (varies by manufacturer) |
|
| 17 | - - High cycle life, safer chemistry compared to other Li-ion cells |
|
| 18 | - |
|
| 19 | -- **Applications:** |
|
| 20 | - - Battery packs for **energy storage systems**, **EVs**, **electric tools**, and **solar storage** |
battery-dat/battery-rechargerable-dat/battery-li-dat/li-battery-size-dat/li-battery-size-dat.md
| ... | ... | @@ -1,32 +0,0 @@ |
| 1 | - |
|
| 2 | -# li-battery-size-dat |
|
| 3 | - |
|
| 4 | - |
|
| 5 | -- [[soldering-tools-spot-welding-dat]] |
|
| 6 | - |
|
| 7 | -- [[32125-dat]] |
|
| 8 | - |
|
| 9 | - |
|
| 10 | -- [[18650-dat]] - [[21700-dat]] - [[26650-dat]] - [[32650-dat]] - [[32700-dat]] - [[A123-battery-dat]] - [[LFP-battery-dat]] - [[LTO-battery-dat]] - [[LTO-18650-battery-dat]] - [[LTO-26650-battery-dat]] - [[LTO-32700-battery-dat]] - [[LTO-32650-battery-dat]] |
|
| 11 | - |
|
| 12 | - |
|
| 13 | -- [[38120-dat]] |
|
| 14 | - |
|
| 15 | - |
|
| 16 | - |
|
| 17 | - |
|
| 18 | - |
|
| 19 | -- [[pouch-battery-dat]] |
|
| 20 | - |
|
| 21 | - |
|
| 22 | -- 21700: 21mm diameter, 70mm length. Increasingly popular, offering higher capacity than 18650. |
|
| 23 | -- 26650: 26mm diameter, 65mm length. Larger capacity and often higher discharge current capability than 18650. |
|
| 24 | -- 14500: 14mm diameter, 50mm length. Same physical size as a standard AA battery. |
|
| 25 | -- 16340: 16mm diameter, 34mm length. Same physical size as a CR123A battery. |
|
| 26 | -- 10440: 10mm diameter, 44mm length. Same physical size as a standard AAA battery. |
|
| 27 | -- `32650` / `32700`: 32mm diameter, 65mm or 70mm length. Often used for LiFePO4 chemistry, providing high power and capacity. |
|
| 28 | - |
|
| 29 | - |
|
| 30 | -## ref |
|
| 31 | - |
|
| 32 | -- [[18650]] |
|
| ... | ... | \ No newline at end of file |
battery-dat/battery-rechargerable-dat/battery-li-dat/li-battery-size-dat/pouch-battery-dat/2025-02-21-15-06-43.png
| ... | ... | Binary files a/battery-dat/battery-rechargerable-dat/battery-li-dat/li-battery-size-dat/pouch-battery-dat/2025-02-21-15-06-43.png and /dev/null differ |
battery-dat/battery-rechargerable-dat/battery-li-dat/li-battery-size-dat/pouch-battery-dat/pouch-battery-dat.md
| ... | ... | @@ -1,73 +0,0 @@ |
| 1 | - |
|
| 2 | -# pouch-battery-dat |
|
| 3 | - |
|
| 4 | - |
|
| 5 | - |
|
| 6 | - |
|
| 7 | - |
|
| 8 | -## **Characteristics of Pouch Batteries** |
|
| 9 | -1. **Lightweight Design** |
|
| 10 | - - Uses **aluminum-plastic film**, making it lighter than metal-cased batteries. |
|
| 11 | -2. **High Energy Density** |
|
| 12 | - - Pouch batteries have **10%-15% higher volumetric energy density** than prismatic and cylindrical batteries, ideal for long-range applications. |
|
| 13 | -3. **Better Safety** |
|
| 14 | - - In case of damage, pouch batteries **swell and vent gas instead of exploding**, making them safer than cylindrical cells. |
|
| 15 | -4. **Flexible Shape and Size** |
|
| 16 | - - Can be **customized to fit different device designs**, making them ideal for **compact electronic devices and high-end EVs**. |
|
| 17 | -5. **Lower Mechanical Strength** |
|
| 18 | - - The **soft casing is more prone to damage** and requires additional structural protection. |
|
| 19 | -6. **Higher Production Cost** |
|
| 20 | - - Manufacturing is **more complex and expensive** than cylindrical or prismatic cells. |
|
| 21 | - |
|
| 22 | ---- |
|
| 23 | - |
|
| 24 | -## **Pouch vs. Cylindrical vs. Prismatic Batteries** |
|
| 25 | -| **Type** | **Casing Material** | **Energy Density** | **Safety** | **Weight** | **Applications** | |
|
| 26 | -|---------|----------------|----------------|------------|--------|----------------| |
|
| 27 | -| **Pouch Battery** | Aluminum-plastic film | **Highest** | High (Swells instead of exploding) | **Lightest** | **High-end EVs, smartphones, laptops, drones** | |
|
| 28 | -| **Cylindrical Battery (18650/21700)** | Stainless steel shell | Medium | Medium (Has safety valves) | Heavy | **EVs (Tesla), laptops, power tools** | |
|
| 29 | -| **Prismatic Battery** | Aluminum or steel case | High | Medium (Rigid structure) | Medium | **EVs, energy storage systems** | |
|
| 30 | - |
|
| 31 | ---- |
|
| 32 | - |
|
| 33 | -## **Applications of Pouch Batteries** |
|
| 34 | -1. **Electric Vehicles (EVs)** |
|
| 35 | - - Used by **BYD, NIO, Hyundai, BMW**, and other manufacturers. |
|
| 36 | -2. **Consumer Electronics** |
|
| 37 | - - Common in **smartphones, laptops, tablets**, and other portable devices. |
|
| 38 | -3. **Energy Storage Systems** |
|
| 39 | - - Some **home and commercial energy storage systems** use pouch batteries for higher energy density. |
|
| 40 | -4. **Drones & E-Mobility** |
|
| 41 | - - Due to their **lightweight design**, pouch batteries are preferred for **drones, e-skateboards, and lightweight EVs**. |
|
| 42 | - |
|
| 43 | ---- |
|
| 44 | - |
|
| 45 | -## **Future Trends** |
|
| 46 | -- **High-Nickel Chemistry** (Improving energy density, reducing cobalt usage) |
|
| 47 | -- **Solid-State Batteries** (Enhancing safety and increasing energy capacity) |
|
| 48 | -- **Recycling & Sustainability** (Reducing environmental impact and improving recyclability) |
|
| 49 | - |
|
| 50 | ---- |
|
| 51 | - |
|
| 52 | -## Soft-pack (pouch) battery |
|
| 53 | - |
|
| 54 | - |
|
| 55 | -A Soft-pack Pouch Lithium Battery (or Pouch-type Lithium Battery) refers to a specific form factor of Lithium-ion or Lithium-Polymer (Li-Poly) batteries that is encased in a flexible, soft pouch made of materials like aluminum foil. This type of battery is typically lighter and more compact compared to cylindrical cells (like 18650) or prismatic cells, and it offers certain advantages in terms of flexibility, form factor, and space efficiency. |
|
| 56 | - |
|
| 57 | -1. Good safety performance: |
|
| 58 | - |
|
| 59 | -The soft packing battery does not cause an explosion accident as like the steel shell battery or aluminum shell battery. Generally, in the case of a safety hazard, the outer casing will only bulge at most. |
|
| 60 | - |
|
| 61 | -2. Small size, light weight, high energy: |
|
| 62 | - |
|
| 63 | -in terms of weight, the soft pack battery is 40% lighter than the equivalent capacity of the steel casing lithium battery, and 20% lighter than the aluminum casing battery. In terms of capacity, the soft-pack lithium battery is 10-15% higher than the steel casing battery of the same specification scale, and 5-10% higher than the aluminum casing battery. |
|
| 64 | - |
|
| 65 | -3. The internal resistance is small: |
|
| 66 | - |
|
| 67 | -We all know that the lithium battery itself will have an inevitable self-discharge reaction, and the greater the internal resistance, the more intense the self-discharge. Relatively speaking, the internal resistance of the soft-pack lithium battery is small, which greatly reduces the self-consumption of the battery. |
|
| 68 | - |
|
| 69 | -4. Flexible planning: |
|
| 70 | - |
|
| 71 | -the shape of the soft pack battery can be determined by specific business needs, customized planning according to the detailed dimensions of the battery box, perhaps through a variety of battery arrangements to achieve full use of the internal space of the battery box, to meet Differentiated needs. |
|
| 72 | - |
|
| 73 | - |
|
| ... | ... | \ No newline at end of file |
battery-dat/battery-rechargerable-dat/battery-rechargerable-dat.md
| ... | ... | @@ -1,59 +1,60 @@ |
| 1 | - |
|
| 2 | - |
|
| 3 | - |
|
| 4 | -# rechargerable-battery-dat |
|
| 5 | - |
|
| 6 | - |
|
| 7 | -- [[battery-li-dat]] - [[battery-LFP-dat]] |
|
| 8 | - |
|
| 9 | - |
|
| 10 | -- [[battery-protector-dat]] - [[battery-BMS-dat]] - [[battery-charger-dat]] |
|
| 11 | - |
|
| 12 | - |
|
| 13 | -## charge time |
|
| 14 | - |
|
| 15 | -| **Battery Type** | **Typical Charge Time** | **Notes** | |
|
| 16 | -| -------------------------------- | ----------------------- | ------------------------------------------------------- | |
|
| 17 | -| **Lead-acid** | 8-12 hours | Slow charge time, can be faster with a fast charger. | |
|
| 18 | -| **LFP (Lithium Iron Phosphate)** | 2-4 hours | Similar to lithium-ion but may take slightly longer. | |
|
| 19 | -| **Lithium-ion (Li-ion)** | 1-3 hours | Fastest charging, especially with modern fast chargers. | |
|
| 20 | - |
|
| 21 | - |
|
| 22 | - |
|
| 23 | -## Common Rechargeable Battery Internal Resistance and Aging |
|
| 24 | - |
|
| 25 | -| Battery Type | Nominal Voltage | Capacity Range | Internal Resistance (New) | Internal Resistance After ~200 Cycles | Notes / Applications | |
|
| 26 | -| --------------------------- | --------------- | -------------- | ------------------------- | ------------------------------------- | ----------------------------------------------- | |
|
| 27 | -| **AA NiMH** | 1.2V | 1800–2500 mAh | 20–50 mΩ | 30–80 mΩ | Consumer electronics, toys | |
|
| 28 | -| **AAA NiMH** | 1.2V | 600–1200 mAh | 30–70 mΩ | 40–100 mΩ | Small electronics, remote controls | |
|
| 29 | -| **18650 Li-ion** | 3.6–3.7V | 2000–3500 mAh | 30–80 mΩ | 40–120 mΩ | Laptops, power banks, flashlights | |
|
| 30 | -| **High-drain 18650 Li-ion** | 3.6–3.7V | 1500–3000 mAh | 15–30 mΩ | 25–50 mΩ | Power tools, e-cigarettes, high-current devices | |
|
| 31 | -| **26650 Li-ion** | 3.6–3.7V | 4000–6000 mAh | 10–40 mΩ | 20–60 mΩ | High-capacity flashlights, e-bikes | |
|
| 32 | -| **12V Lead-Acid (SLA/AGM)** | 12V | 7–20 Ah | 0.12–0.3 Ω | 0.15–0.4 Ω | Scooters, UPS, emergency lighting | |
|
| 33 | -| **12V LiFePO4** | 12.8V | 10–20 Ah | 5–20 mΩ | 10–30 mΩ | E-bikes, solar storage, UPS | |
|
| 34 | -| **9V NiMH** | 8.4–9V | 150–300 mAh | 150–300 mΩ | 200–400 mΩ | Smoke detectors, small electronics | |
|
| 35 | -| **NiCd AA** | 1.2V | 600–1000 mAh | 30–100 mΩ | 50–150 mΩ | Older toys, cordless phones | |
|
| 36 | -| **LiPo (3.7V per cell)** | 3.7V | 500–5000 mAh | 20–100 mΩ | 40–150 mΩ | Drones, RC cars, FPV drones | |
|
| 37 | - |
|
| 38 | -### Notes on Internal Resistance Change: |
|
| 39 | -- Internal resistance **increases gradually** with usage cycles and charging/discharging. |
|
| 40 | -- The amount of increase depends on: |
|
| 41 | - - Battery chemistry and quality |
|
| 42 | - - Depth of discharge and charging rate |
|
| 43 | - - Temperature and storage conditions |
|
| 44 | -- Higher resistance results in **lower peak current capability** and slightly reduced capacity over time. |
|
| 45 | - |
|
| 46 | - |
|
| 47 | - |
|
| 48 | -## Types |
|
| 49 | - |
|
| 50 | -- [[Lead-Acid-Battery-dat]] - [[li-battery-dat]] |
|
| 51 | - |
|
| 52 | -- [[LFP-dat]] |
|
| 53 | - |
|
| 54 | -- [[NCA-dat]] - [[NCM-dat]] - [[Ternary-Lithium-Battery-dat]] |
|
| 55 | - |
|
| 56 | - |
|
| 57 | -## ref |
|
| 58 | - |
|
| 1 | +
|
|
| 2 | +
|
|
| 3 | +
|
|
| 4 | +# rechargerable-battery-dat
|
|
| 5 | +
|
|
| 6 | +
|
|
| 7 | +- [[battery-li-dat]] - [[battery-LFP-dat]]
|
|
| 8 | +
|
|
| 9 | +- [[battery-li-size-dat]] - [[18650-dat]]
|
|
| 10 | +
|
|
| 11 | +- [[battery-protector-dat]] - [[battery-BMS-dat]] - [[battery-charger-dat]]
|
|
| 12 | +
|
|
| 13 | +
|
|
| 14 | +## charge time
|
|
| 15 | +
|
|
| 16 | +| **Battery Type** | **Typical Charge Time** | **Notes** |
|
|
| 17 | +| -------------------------------- | ----------------------- | ------------------------------------------------------- |
|
|
| 18 | +| **Lead-acid** | 8-12 hours | Slow charge time, can be faster with a fast charger. |
|
|
| 19 | +| **LFP (Lithium Iron Phosphate)** | 2-4 hours | Similar to lithium-ion but may take slightly longer. |
|
|
| 20 | +| **Lithium-ion (Li-ion)** | 1-3 hours | Fastest charging, especially with modern fast chargers. |
|
|
| 21 | +
|
|
| 22 | +
|
|
| 23 | +
|
|
| 24 | +## Common Rechargeable Battery Internal Resistance and Aging
|
|
| 25 | +
|
|
| 26 | +| Battery Type | Nominal Voltage | Capacity Range | Internal Resistance (New) | Internal Resistance After ~200 Cycles | Notes / Applications |
|
|
| 27 | +| --------------------------- | --------------- | -------------- | ------------------------- | ------------------------------------- | ----------------------------------------------- |
|
|
| 28 | +| **AA NiMH** | 1.2V | 1800–2500 mAh | 20–50 mΩ | 30–80 mΩ | Consumer electronics, toys |
|
|
| 29 | +| **AAA NiMH** | 1.2V | 600–1200 mAh | 30–70 mΩ | 40–100 mΩ | Small electronics, remote controls |
|
|
| 30 | +| **18650 Li-ion** | 3.6–3.7V | 2000–3500 mAh | 30–80 mΩ | 40–120 mΩ | Laptops, power banks, flashlights |
|
|
| 31 | +| **High-drain 18650 Li-ion** | 3.6–3.7V | 1500–3000 mAh | 15–30 mΩ | 25–50 mΩ | Power tools, e-cigarettes, high-current devices |
|
|
| 32 | +| **26650 Li-ion** | 3.6–3.7V | 4000–6000 mAh | 10–40 mΩ | 20–60 mΩ | High-capacity flashlights, e-bikes |
|
|
| 33 | +| **12V Lead-Acid (SLA/AGM)** | 12V | 7–20 Ah | 0.12–0.3 Ω | 0.15–0.4 Ω | Scooters, UPS, emergency lighting |
|
|
| 34 | +| **12V LiFePO4** | 12.8V | 10–20 Ah | 5–20 mΩ | 10–30 mΩ | E-bikes, solar storage, UPS |
|
|
| 35 | +| **9V NiMH** | 8.4–9V | 150–300 mAh | 150–300 mΩ | 200–400 mΩ | Smoke detectors, small electronics |
|
|
| 36 | +| **NiCd AA** | 1.2V | 600–1000 mAh | 30–100 mΩ | 50–150 mΩ | Older toys, cordless phones |
|
|
| 37 | +| **LiPo (3.7V per cell)** | 3.7V | 500–5000 mAh | 20–100 mΩ | 40–150 mΩ | Drones, RC cars, FPV drones |
|
|
| 38 | +
|
|
| 39 | +### Notes on Internal Resistance Change:
|
|
| 40 | +- Internal resistance **increases gradually** with usage cycles and charging/discharging.
|
|
| 41 | +- The amount of increase depends on:
|
|
| 42 | + - Battery chemistry and quality
|
|
| 43 | + - Depth of discharge and charging rate
|
|
| 44 | + - Temperature and storage conditions
|
|
| 45 | +- Higher resistance results in **lower peak current capability** and slightly reduced capacity over time.
|
|
| 46 | +
|
|
| 47 | +
|
|
| 48 | +
|
|
| 49 | +## Types
|
|
| 50 | +
|
|
| 51 | +- [[Lead-Acid-Battery-dat]] - [[li-battery-dat]]
|
|
| 52 | +
|
|
| 53 | +- [[LFP-dat]]
|
|
| 54 | +
|
|
| 55 | +- [[NCA-dat]] - [[NCM-dat]] - [[Ternary-Lithium-Battery-dat]]
|
|
| 56 | +
|
|
| 57 | +
|
|
| 58 | +## ref
|
|
| 59 | +
|
|
| 59 | 60 | - [[battery-dat]] |
| ... | ... | \ No newline at end of file |
battery-dat/battery-size-dat/battery-size-dat.md
| ... | ... | @@ -1,28 +1,28 @@ |
| 1 | - |
|
| 2 | -# battery-size-dat.md |
|
| 3 | - |
|
| 4 | -- [[battery-9V-dat]] |
|
| 5 | - |
|
| 6 | -- [[CR123-dat]] |
|
| 7 | - |
|
| 8 | -- [[CR1220-dat]] - [[CR2032-dat]] - [[CR2045-dat]] - [[CR2450-dat]] |
|
| 9 | - |
|
| 10 | -- [[li-battery-size-dat]] |
|
| 11 | - |
|
| 12 | - |
|
| 13 | - |
|
| 14 | - |
|
| 15 | - |
|
| 16 | - |
|
| 17 | -## parallel coin batteries |
|
| 18 | - |
|
| 19 | - |
|
| 20 | - |
|
| 21 | - |
|
| 22 | - |
|
| 23 | - |
|
| 24 | - |
|
| 25 | - |
|
| 26 | -## ref |
|
| 27 | - |
|
| 1 | +
|
|
| 2 | +# battery-size-dat.md
|
|
| 3 | +
|
|
| 4 | +- [[battery-9V-dat]]
|
|
| 5 | +
|
|
| 6 | +- [[CR123-dat]]
|
|
| 7 | +
|
|
| 8 | +- [[CR1220-dat]] - [[CR2032-dat]] - [[CR2045-dat]] - [[CR2450-dat]]
|
|
| 9 | +
|
|
| 10 | +- [[battery-li-size-dat]]
|
|
| 11 | +
|
|
| 12 | +
|
|
| 13 | +
|
|
| 14 | +
|
|
| 15 | +
|
|
| 16 | +
|
|
| 17 | +## parallel coin batteries
|
|
| 18 | +
|
|
| 19 | +
|
|
| 20 | +
|
|
| 21 | +
|
|
| 22 | +
|
|
| 23 | +
|
|
| 24 | +
|
|
| 25 | +
|
|
| 26 | +## ref
|
|
| 27 | +
|
|
| 28 | 28 | - [[battery-dat]] - [[power-dat]] |
| ... | ... | \ No newline at end of file |