ProcedureYou're wearing protective gear and know not-to-panic if you see fire, right? Okay then, use the cutters to carefully remove the top from the battery. Pull away the plastic tape or wrap and unroll the metal. Either use the lithium right away or store it right away.
For example, a 12V Tubular lead Acid battery might have an LVC of 10.8V. This means the LVC will disconnect the battery from the Load when the voltage drops to 10.8V. For the lithium battery, this cutoff is at higher voltages as the Lithium battery LifePo4 has a voltage of 12.8 Volts, so the cutoff voltage for a Low battery is 11.2 Volts.
What happens when a lithium battery is left in a charger?
When lithium-ion batteries must be left in the charger for operational readiness, some chargers apply a brief topping charge to compensate for the small self-discharge the battery and its protective circuit consume. The charger may kick in when the open circuit voltage drops to 4.05V/cell and turn off again at 4.20V/cell.
What is a cut-off voltage in a battery?
In batteries, the cut-off (final) voltage is the prescribed lower-limit voltage at which battery discharge is considered complete. The cut-off voltage is usually chosen so that the maximum useful capacity of the battery is achieved.
What happens if a lithium ion battery has a trickle charge?
A continuous trickle charge would cause plating of metallic lithium and compromise safety. To minimize stress, keep the lithium-ion battery at the peak cut-off as short as possible. Once the charge is terminated, the battery voltage begins to drop. This eases the voltage stress.
According to Battery University: Li-ion cannot absorb overcharge. When fully charged, the charge current must be cut off. A continuous trickle charge would cause plating of metallic lithium and compromise safety. To minimize stress, keep the lithium-ion battery at the peak cut-off as short as possible. See batteryuniversity.com/learn/article/
Why does a lithium ion Charger cut off the applied voltage?
It seems standard for a lithium-ion charger to cut off the applied voltage when the CV-mode current draw dips below 0.1C (or thereabouts). Why is this necessary? Why can't the charger continue to apply 4.2V indefinitely? According to Battery University: Li-ion cannot absorb overcharge. When fully charged, the charge current must be cut off.