EP0609229A1 - Batterietemperaturkompenationsgerät für Batterienachladungsvorrichtung - Google Patents

Batterietemperaturkompenationsgerät für Batterienachladungsvorrichtung

Info

Publication number
EP0609229A1
EP0609229A1 EP92918397A EP92918397A EP0609229A1 EP 0609229 A1 EP0609229 A1 EP 0609229A1 EP 92918397 A EP92918397 A EP 92918397A EP 92918397 A EP92918397 A EP 92918397A EP 0609229 A1 EP0609229 A1 EP 0609229A1
Authority
EP
European Patent Office
Prior art keywords
battery
voltage
bat
temperature
module
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Ceased
Application number
EP92918397A
Other languages
English (en)
French (fr)
Inventor
Albert A. Mcfadden
Mark Nowicki
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
CANADIAN INDEPENDENT POWER PRODUCTS Inc
Original Assignee
CANADIAN INDEPENDENT POWER PRODUCTS Inc
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by CANADIAN INDEPENDENT POWER PRODUCTS Inc filed Critical CANADIAN INDEPENDENT POWER PRODUCTS Inc
Publication of EP0609229A1 publication Critical patent/EP0609229A1/de
Ceased legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H02GENERATION; CONVERSION OR DISTRIBUTION OF ELECTRIC POWER
    • H02JCIRCUIT ARRANGEMENTS OR SYSTEMS FOR SUPPLYING OR DISTRIBUTING ELECTRIC POWER; SYSTEMS FOR STORING ELECTRIC ENERGY
    • H02J7/00Circuit arrangements for charging or depolarising batteries or for supplying loads from batteries
    • H02J7/007Regulation of charging or discharging current or voltage
    • H02J7/007188Regulation of charging or discharging current or voltage the charge cycle being controlled or terminated in response to non-electric parameters
    • H02J7/007192Regulation of charging or discharging current or voltage the charge cycle being controlled or terminated in response to non-electric parameters in response to temperature
    • H02J7/007194Regulation of charging or discharging current or voltage the charge cycle being controlled or terminated in response to non-electric parameters in response to temperature of the battery
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H02GENERATION; CONVERSION OR DISTRIBUTION OF ELECTRIC POWER
    • H02JCIRCUIT ARRANGEMENTS OR SYSTEMS FOR SUPPLYING OR DISTRIBUTING ELECTRIC POWER; SYSTEMS FOR STORING ELECTRIC ENERGY
    • H02J7/00Circuit arrangements for charging or depolarising batteries or for supplying loads from batteries
    • H02J7/007Regulation of charging or discharging current or voltage
    • H02J7/00712Regulation of charging or discharging current or voltage the cycle being controlled or terminated in response to electric parameters

Definitions

  • Battery manufacturers in the past few years, have developed sealed, lead-acid maintenance-free batteries as a power source, or prime movers, for the tele- communications industry, telephone switching systems and the like, and in the computer industry for uninterrupted power supplies; they have found their way into automotive battery applications, and also as a future electric source in electric-motored automobiles. It is recommended, by such manufacturers of lead-acid maintenance-free batteries that the optimum operating temperature for the longest life of the battery be maintained at 25 ⁇ C. The battery life is considerably shortened (and in some cases to less than half of the expected life) , if such is not maintained during the charging cycle, or trickling charge cycle, for the batteries.
  • COOPER et al. in U.S.A. Patent No. 4,667,143 issued on 19 May, 1987 discloses a battery charger having temperature compensated charge rates.
  • the circuitry disclosed is one of a battery charger providing a control circuit for switching the type of regulation in response to the current, voltage and temperature signals, but the temperature signal is one of ambient temperature and not of battery temperature. It is only the battery temperature which affects the internal impedance of the battery during the recharging cycle. It is an object of the invention therefore to adjust, in response to the battery temperature, the recharging voltage to a battery.
  • the invention achieves the foregoing by the use of a temperature-sensing element, preferably an integrated circuit, physically mounted on the battery to sense the temperature of the battery.
  • a monitoring circuit which proportionately regulates, in response to the temperature of the battery, the voltage applied by a battery charger electrically connected to the battery, whereupon regulation follows along a linear graph, over the preferred operating range of -40 * C to +60°C as a preferred linear voltage compensation between the temperatures ranging from 0 ⁇ C to 50"C at voltages of - 2.5 to -4.5 mV/°C/cell (60-108mV/ ⁇ C/string); but the slope of the linear compensation can be changed depending upon the type of batteries being recharged and the total voltage of the ⁇ battery pack string.
  • the invention achieves, in response to the actual ambient or current temperature of the battery, during its recharging cycle, a dynamic changing of the recharging voltage applied to the battery terminals by changing the recharging reference voltage or "float voltage", through the range of -1.5 volts to +1.5 volts, as a deviation voltage around the preferred or recommended recharging voltage, for recharging purposes, (the null point) for any given temperature, which generally is the actual recharge voltage, per cell; or. battery, at the reference temperature for the battery; namely, 25°C.
  • FIGS 1A and IB are block and circuit diagrams of the preferred embodiment.
  • Figure 2 is a typical voltage vs. temperature graph of "compensating" or “float voltages” for a nominal 24V battery string having 24 operating lead- acid cells.
  • FIG. 3 is a circuit diagram, illustrating the outboard compensating system, according to the invention, interconnected between a battery bank (BB), for recharging a plurality of serially connected batteries (BAT), and a battery charger (R) for recharging the same.
  • BB battery bank
  • BAT serially connected batteries
  • R battery charger
  • Figure 4 is a top plan view, of the sensor housing and in phantom, showing the sensor (S) and connecting cable, in a side elevational view of the sensor adhesively attached to the side of a battery being in the battery bank string of figure 3.
  • FIG 2 there is plotted, the ⁇ preferred reference of said voltages (V) depicted, according to battery temperature, in centigrade, as against voltage that is voltage deviating around the meridian which for lead acid batteries of 24 cells is a nominal 48 volts.
  • V voltages
  • the slope of the line passing through the null point (NP) needs to be changed, and this is acco odated by the switches in switch (SI), in figure IB, switching the resistances (RN3) and (RN4) in or out of the circuit to be described with reference to figure IB.
  • SI switch
  • FIG IB switching the resistances (RN3) and (RN4) in or out of the circuit to be described with reference to figure IB.
  • FIG 1 it is a composite block float diagram and detail circuit diagram.
  • the circuit in its present form was designed for use with voltage regulated rectifiers and 24 cell battery strings.
  • the required co-efficient of compensation is about -72mV/c ⁇ and is constant with varying temperature.
  • the prototype has a measured co ⁇ efficient of 0.71.49mV/C # .
  • the compensator is spliced into the reference leads and takes its power from the battery and its output drives the reference input of the rectifier. The compensator will develop a voltage between input and output terminals, increasing proportionally to the temperature.
  • JP2 is a connector connected to a battery bank (BB), see figure 3, at one end, and through a fuse element to Block A, an oscillator and output buffer, for generating a square wave of the voltage on JP2.
  • Block A connects to voltage multiplier and regulator, Block B, their combined output feed into summing amplifier Block D which is controlled, in part, by reference voltage generator (C) having a reference means, refl. From the summing amplifier and the reference voltage generator, some voltage is fed to a slope-selection circuit.
  • Block F Block F is designed to accommodate various types of batteries requiring different slopes for the purposes of charging, by various selections of the switches, (SI) through (S4) in Block F.
  • the differential in voltage at JP3 and JP2 following the chart of figure 2, maintains the voltage for charging, when a battery charger 100 is connected in accordance with figure 3 to the battery bank (BB) , and to the circuit of figures 1A and IB, to maintain the voltage across the terminals of the battery bank (BB) , so as to follow along the linear slope of the graph of figure 2.
  • the connections (JP3) connect directly to the charger (R,100), as seen in figure 3 and provide a feedback of a voltage so that the output from the charger (B/0+-) can change as it is applied to the positive and negative terminal of the battery bank (BB). Referring to the oscillator and output buffer
  • Block A the negative terminal of a battery string is connected to plug (JP2) and fed by a fuse (FI), through resistor R4, into the collector of transistor Q3 which, with Ql, acts as switching elements of an astable multivibrator, also consisting of capacitors Cl and C2 interconnected between base and collectors of these transistors.
  • the resistors Rl, R2, R4 and R5 are appropriately connected to either base or to collectors so as to establish the multivibrating circuit while the emitters of both transistors are interconnected in the normal fashion.
  • the frequency of oscillation is determined largely by the RC constant of (C1,R5), (C2,R1) and is about, preferably, 8 kHz with this configuration.
  • Transistors Q2 and Q4 form a complementary push-pull buffer, driven by Ql of the multivibrator aforesaid described, since the bases of Q2 and Q4 are interconnected, as are the emitters.
  • the collector of Q4 is connected to the emitters of the multivibrator Q3 and to the collector resistor R4.
  • the -50 volt battery input, from connector JP2 is chopped into a squarewave between 0 volts and -50 volts with a frequency of about 8kHz.
  • the first voltage doubler is an inverting doubler consisting of capacitors C4, C6 and serially connected diodes D5 and D6.
  • the capacitor C4 has its other lead connected to the output of the oscillator and buffer Block A, as noted.
  • the output of this inverting doubler consists of +50 volts and is passed through resistor R3 to supply current to a reversed bias Zener diode D2, fixing the reference voltage output thereat, because of filter capacitor C7 which is parallel to the Zener, at +15 volts. This now acts as the positive part of the power supply for the operational amplifiers of figure 1.
  • Block B Within Block B is a second voltage multiplier that in fact is a doubler and has its output voltage referenced at twice the battery voltage or approximately -100 volts DC. It consists of capacitor components C3 and C5 and series diodes D4 and Dl, wherein the capacitor C3 is connected between the junction of the two diodes to the oscillator and output buffer Block A and to the common lead of capacitor C4.
  • the cathode of the diode D4 is connected through series resistor R16 to the cathode of Zener diode D3 whose cathode is connected in series to Zener diode D2 and is in parallel to a filter capacitor C8 whereby a common reference voltage of -15 volts is developed along the anode side of Zener D3 to become the negative part of the power supply from the remainder of circuitry of figure 1.
  • a doubling of voltage takes place at the cathode side of diode Dl so that the output voltage thereat is -100 volts.
  • the 100 volts is used to supply power to the output amplifier stage Block E.
  • Block C is a reference voltage generator. It consists of a stable reference voltage element refl having an output of 2.5 volts to operational amplifier U3.
  • the other input of the operational amplifier U3 is connected through a potentiometer R23 in series, at one end, to resistor R21 and ground; the other end of the potentiometer, through resistor R22 is connected to the output of the operational amplifier U3.
  • the potentiometer R23 is used to adjust the voltage of the output, at pin 6 of the operational amplifier U3 and to "pad out" any errors caused by component tolerances used.
  • the output voltage of the operational amplifier U3 is nominally at +2.98 volts. With a probe temperature at 25°C which is connected to point Jl, the output of the operational amplifier U3, is adjusted by R23 so that there is no voltage difference between input and output terminals JP2 and JP3 of figure 1.
  • a temperature sensing element, S such as a LM335, being an integrated circuit, is mounted on the physical surface of a battery BAT, such that the sensing element S is not subjected to any air currents circulating about the battery BAT.
  • the sensing element S has an output linearity proportional to temperature with a slope of 10 millivolts per degree Celsius, for the lead-acid batteries. At 25 * C, the output is approximately 2.98 volts.
  • the sensing element is driven from the negative power supply; -15 volts, of the voltage multiplier regulator Block B so that the output thereof is always negative with respect to the circuit ground of the compensator of figure 1.
  • the output of the reference voltage generator Block C feeds into summing amplifier, Block D, which has an operational amplifier U2 and a bank, RN1 is provided for a plurality, 7 in number, of resistive inputs in order to provide various slopes, for various battery manufacturers' published specifications of slope.
  • the summing amplifier has three weighted inputs, one of which is the 2.98 volt reference from U3, serially connected through input resistor R6 to provide a forward gain of 1.2 for U2.
  • the output from the temperature- sensing element, or temperature sensor TSE, which is -2.98 volts at 25 * C is connected to the outer input through resistor R7 with a gain of 1.2.
  • the negative terminal of the battery is connected to the third input, from JP2 is connected to pin 8 of resistor network RNl for a gain 1/6.
  • a gain of 1.2 for the reference REF1 and the temperature sensor TSE will cause battery voltage to vary -72 millivolts per °C and will be a normal rest position.
  • some batteries because of their manufacture, may require different slopes.
  • FIG. 1 (figure 2), a network of resistors comprising any or all of the elements RN3 and RN4, slope selection circuit.
  • Block F can be connected in parallel with resistor R6 and also with resistor R7 respectively, using the various switches located in switch SI so that various slopes in the following ranges can be achieved; -60, -72, -84, -96, and -108 millivolts per °C.
  • the feedback resistor for the operational amplifier U2 is in fact, parallel resistors 1 through 6 of RNl which is connected to the output terminal 6 of the operational amplifier
  • this operational amplifier U2 can be selected for battery strings of selected voltage ranges, i.e., 36 volts, 24 volts, or 12 volts by selecting the resistors of RNl in or out of the circuit.
  • Block E Referring to voltage amplifier and output buffer, Block E, the same consists of an operational amplifier Ul, and transistor Q5, operating as a Class "A" -- amplifier, has the base of Q5 connected through resistor R13 to the output of operational amplifier Ul, providing temperature-compensated voltage to the reference terminals of the battery charger connected to JP3.
  • This circuit has a gain of 6, which is set by using a single resistive network RN2.
  • U2 is a low offset type and thus, the trimming of potentiometer R17, connected between terminals 1, 8 and 7 of the operational amplifier Ul, is not normally needed.
  • EXAMPLE COMPONENT LIST Figures 1A, IB, 3, 4)

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Power Engineering (AREA)
  • Charge And Discharge Circuits For Batteries Or The Like (AREA)
  • Secondary Cells (AREA)
  • Hybrid Cells (AREA)
EP92918397A 1992-08-21 1992-08-21 Batterietemperaturkompenationsgerät für Batterienachladungsvorrichtung Ceased EP0609229A1 (de)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
PCT/CA1992/000367 WO1994005069A1 (en) 1992-08-21 1992-08-21 Battery temperature compensating device for battery recharging systems

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
EP0609229A1 true EP0609229A1 (de) 1994-08-10

Family

ID=4172939

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
EP92918397A Ceased EP0609229A1 (de) 1992-08-21 1992-08-21 Batterietemperaturkompenationsgerät für Batterienachladungsvorrichtung

Country Status (8)

Country Link
EP (1) EP0609229A1 (de)
JP (1) JPH07500480A (de)
AU (1) AU2476292A (de)
CA (1) CA2121338C (de)
DE (1) DE609229T1 (de)
ES (1) ES2056040T1 (de)
GR (1) GR940300071T1 (de)
WO (1) WO1994005069A1 (de)

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US5869969A (en) * 1996-11-13 1999-02-09 Northern Telecom Limited Battery charger/rectifier voltage temperature compensation circuit including protection and diagnostic scheme
US8958998B2 (en) 1997-11-03 2015-02-17 Midtronics, Inc. Electronic battery tester with network communication
US7398176B2 (en) 2000-03-27 2008-07-08 Midtronics, Inc. Battery testers with secondary functionality
US8513949B2 (en) 2000-03-27 2013-08-20 Midtronics, Inc. Electronic battery tester or charger with databus connection
US7446536B2 (en) 2000-03-27 2008-11-04 Midtronics, Inc. Scan tool for electronic battery tester
US9018958B2 (en) 2003-09-05 2015-04-28 Midtronics, Inc. Method and apparatus for measuring a parameter of a vehicle electrical system
US9255955B2 (en) 2003-09-05 2016-02-09 Midtronics, Inc. Method and apparatus for measuring a parameter of a vehicle electrical system
US9496720B2 (en) 2004-08-20 2016-11-15 Midtronics, Inc. System for automatically gathering battery information
US8344685B2 (en) 2004-08-20 2013-01-01 Midtronics, Inc. System for automatically gathering battery information
US9274157B2 (en) 2007-07-17 2016-03-01 Midtronics, Inc. Battery tester for electric vehicle
GB2491304B (en) 2007-07-17 2013-01-09 Midtronics Inc Battery tester and electric vehicle
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US9425487B2 (en) 2010-03-03 2016-08-23 Midtronics, Inc. Monitor for front terminal batteries
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US10046649B2 (en) 2012-06-28 2018-08-14 Midtronics, Inc. Hybrid and electric vehicle battery pack maintenance device
KR20130030766A (ko) 2010-06-03 2013-03-27 미드트로닉스, 인크. 전기차를 위한 배터리팩 유지보수
US9419311B2 (en) 2010-06-18 2016-08-16 Midtronics, Inc. Battery maintenance device with thermal buffer
US9201120B2 (en) 2010-08-12 2015-12-01 Midtronics, Inc. Electronic battery tester for testing storage battery
DE112012004706T5 (de) 2011-11-10 2014-08-21 Midtronics, Inc. Batteriepack-Testvorrichtung
US9851411B2 (en) 2012-06-28 2017-12-26 Keith S. Champlin Suppressing HF cable oscillations during dynamic measurements of cells and batteries
US11325479B2 (en) 2012-06-28 2022-05-10 Midtronics, Inc. Hybrid and electric vehicle battery maintenance device
US9244100B2 (en) 2013-03-15 2016-01-26 Midtronics, Inc. Current clamp with jaw closure detection
US9312575B2 (en) 2013-05-16 2016-04-12 Midtronics, Inc. Battery testing system and method
US10843574B2 (en) 2013-12-12 2020-11-24 Midtronics, Inc. Calibration and programming of in-vehicle battery sensors
US9923289B2 (en) 2014-01-16 2018-03-20 Midtronics, Inc. Battery clamp with endoskeleton design
US10473555B2 (en) 2014-07-14 2019-11-12 Midtronics, Inc. Automotive maintenance system
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US11973202B2 (en) 2019-12-31 2024-04-30 Midtronics, Inc. Intelligent module interface for battery maintenance device
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Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
CA2121338C (en) 1996-09-10
ES2056040T1 (es) 1994-10-01
CA2121338A1 (en) 1994-02-22
AU2476292A (en) 1994-03-15
GR940300071T1 (en) 1994-10-31
DE609229T1 (de) 1994-12-08
WO1994005069A1 (en) 1994-03-03
JPH07500480A (ja) 1995-01-12

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