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evanjs avatar image
evanjs asked

How do I know when my battery is fully charged? How does the MPPT know?

I have an Victron 150/45TR MPPT charge controller being fed by 600 watts of Renogy panels wired in series.


This is hooked up to two, wires in parallel Renogy 170ah lithium ion batteries.


According to their spec sheet they are "recommended" to be charged to 14.6 volts. I don't want to do that and would prefer charging to 14.2


Looking at the spec sheet, Renogy says the following.


Standard Charge shall consist of charging at 0.2C constant current rate until the battery reaches 14.6V. The battery shall then be charged at a constant voltage of 14.6V while tapering the charge current. Charging will terminate when the charging current has tapered to a 0.02CA. Charge Time is approximately b7 hours. Safe Charging consists of temperatures between 32 ºF and 113 ºF.


Does the battery stop accepting charge from the MPPT once the current has tapered? Does the MPPT know when to stop charging the battery? How do I know when these are full? How does the system know when these are full?


Lastly, what should my absorption voltage and time be? How about the float voltage? Battery University says these batteries should really just be charged in bulk phase to ~90 or 95% capacity and then turn off charging. What does the MPPT aim to charge these at during bulk phase? That doesn't seem to be a setting I can adjust.


Sorry for so many questions, this I am new to all this.

Thanks in advance!

MPPT Controllersbattery chargingLithium Battery
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4 Answers
wkirby avatar image
wkirby answered ·

The battery manufacturer is giving charge parameters assuming that there are no loads connected to it, only the charger. Therefore some of those parameters can't be adhered to. For instance it my never be possible to terminate the charge on tail current if a load is constantly drawing more than that. The MPPT sees the battery and the loads as one.

You set the absorb Voltage to 14.6V (or 14.2V if you like). You can limit the maximum bulk current to 0 2C. In solar applications the bulk current is rarely constant because clouds and stuff. Remember, that includes the loads, so if you have a big load on then the charger is still only going to output 0 2C to the battery and loads. The battery may actually be discharging at this point.

Set Float Voltage to be just above the cell's nominal Voltage - 12.8V or 12.9V should be fine.

In summary, just worry about maximum charge power (0.2C). Maximum Absorb Voltage and Float Voltage. Tail current termination is not currently available as a setting but it will be rare for that scenario to present it's self even if it is enabled.

If you have any more questions, please ask.

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evanjs avatar image evanjs commented ·

Wkirby,


Thank you for taking the time to answer my questions.


My end goal is to get the batteries charged to 90-95% and ensure my settings are correct.


In order to do this I will disconnect all loads and let the solar panels charge the batteries to full.


Just to confirm my settings are correct, here is a screenshot of what I am doing.




This morning I used my Victron BMV 712 to look at my battery voltage and it read 13.32. I had disconnected all loads and the solar charger from the batteries the night before so the batteries have been resting for about 10 hours. Looking at the Renogy Manual there is a graph that shows how voltage translates into SOC.


This graph makes me think that the batteries are only around 20% full.


Using the settings above, and without any loads drawing from the battery, Over a few days the MPPT should be able to get the batteries to 14.2 volts and I will have fully charged the batteries.


Summary of questions:

Are my MPPT settings correct?

Do you agree the batteries are about 20% charged?

Do you agree with my current (no pun intended) charging plan to get the batteries to 90-95% SOC?

Is there any risk of overcharging them?


Thank you again for the help!

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mppt-settings.jpg (424.7 KiB)
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svtti123 avatar image
svtti123 answered ·

Yes the charger knows that when it hits absorption setpoint to begin a constant voltage charge with current gradually decreasing with battery resistance increasing when then tail current hits i believe 2 amps the charge ends or if the absorption timer times out it ends what ever happens first.

You dont need to charge a lithium ion battery to full voltage that does put stress on the battery and therefore shorter cycle life. You can charge the batteries to any usable voltage level you like below the 14.6 volts 14.2 is good.

The chart below is for a nickel Cobalt aluminum or NCA battery i dont know your exact chemistry. Most lithium based if not all batteries follow the same rules. Check on your chemistry to be sure. As yo can see skipping the absorption charge gives you less of a charge. Setting the absorption time to 0 effectively does just that. Controller switches from bulk to float skipping absorption.

So you could start with 0 absorption time slowing increasing it till you get the desired results you want.

The float voltage will keep the battery at float voltage lets just say 14.0 volts if the battery voltage decreases say 13.9 the current will increase to get the voltage back to 14 volts. So any load or battery losses you will the see current increase as the controller trys to maintain 14 volts until the battery voltage drops to approximately 200 mv for a certain amout of time below the float voltage setting i believe . For example a heavy load. This causes a new bulk absorption float cycle. So you need some float settings.

I would go with the battery manufacturer recommended float setting till i was comfortable with my own settings.

You never mentioned battery balance?


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boekel avatar image boekel ♦ commented ·

All 12V Lithium batteries are LiFe(Y)PO4 and have a very different charge curve than you posted, please don't confuse this.


(yes 12V lithium could also be LTO but I haven't seen them in the wild yet)

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wkirby avatar image
wkirby answered ·

@Evanjs I want to back up what @Boekel has said.
PLEASE DO NOT FOLLOW THE INFORMATION IN THE CHART POSETED BY @Svtti123
THAT INFORMATION DOES NOT APPLY TO YOUR BATTERY.
PLEASE ADHERE TO THE RENOGY DOCUMENTATION.

What @Svtti123 has written is correct, but the chart is misleading and irrelevant to this particular question.

As for battery balance, are you using the Renogy BMS? Do you realize that (according to the documantation) if the Renogy battery locks out that only the Renogy BMS can re-activate the battery again? I'd use the Renogy BMS with these batteries.


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inhabor avatar image
inhabor answered ·

So did someone finally figured out the charging settings for the Renogy lithium battery? I can use the information. Thanks

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evanjs avatar image evanjs commented ·

Reading through this may help. I think there are 11 comments in it.

https://community.victronenergy.com/answers/14570/view.html

Ultimately I set the absorption voltage to 13.8 and the float to 13.6.


The biggest thing I did not understand when doing this was the voltage that the batteries are charged at vs the resting voltage of a full charged battery. The maximum charging voltage Renogy recommends is 14.6. Once the battery is fully charged and if you were to remove the charger and any loads, the battery voltage would settle to around 13.6 volts.

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