Discrete Circuit Protects Li-Ion Battery Charger
Mar 1, 2007 12:00 PM
By Zeeshawn Shameem, Customer Applications Engineer, Maxim Integrated Products, Sunnyvale, Calif.
Click here for the enhanced PDF version of this article
including diagrams and/or equations.
News & Features From Auto Electronics
Committed to improving hybrid electric cars
New Motors for Hybrid Vehicles
Battery Firms Battle for Hybrid Hegemony
Innovative Bipolar Plates for Fuel Cells
See More Headlines
Top Articles
Exploring Current Transformer Applications
Ultracapacitor Technology Powers Electronic Circuits
Buck-Converter Design Demystified
Sensorless Motor Control Simplifies Washer Drives
PET Resources
Buyer's Guide
Conferences
Engineering Jobs
Power Electronics Events
Rent Our Lists
Spotlight on Digital Power
Many battery-powered applications use diodes for reverse-battery protection. However, a diode does not always protect a battery charger when the battery is inserted incorrectly. Sometimes when the battery is inserted backwards, it can cause a large amount of current flow through the charging circuitry, potentially destroying both the battery and the charger. Of course, the best way to prevent reverse-battery insertion is to make it mechanically impossible for the user to insert the battery incorrectly into the charging system in the first place. Many companies do this by designing unique physical battery and charger configurations.
However, there are many battery shapes that, unfortunately, allow users to incorrectly insert the battery. The simple circuit in Fig. 1 adds another layer of protection for a single-cell Li-ion battery charger from damage due to backward battery insertion. In the circuit, the MAX1551 linear-mode single-cell Li-ion battery charger delivers the charging current to the cell from either an ac adapter or USB power supply. The MAX9001 is also powered from one of these supplies.
During normal operation, the MAX9001 comparator output is high and the FET is on. When the battery is inserted backwards, the MAX9001 output goes low, a condition that turns the FET off. This blocks the flow of potential battery-surge current out of the BAT terminal. The rapid switching of the FET keeps the current surge to less than 50 mA, and that surge lasts for less than 200 ns before dampening, as shown in the lower scope trace of Fig. 2. Connecting the battery in reverse without this external protection would destroy the MAX1551.
When the cell is inserted backwards, the potential at the inverting terminal of the MAX9001 increases beyond the supply voltage. Resistor R1 limits the amount of overvoltage current sourced through the on-chip electrostatic discharge (ESD) diode. Larger resistor values can be selected to limit the reverse-battery leakage current through the comparator diodes, but the tradeoff is slower operation and larger transients. In the test circuit used, V

