BATTERY CHARGING
A Battery Charger is a device used to put energy
into a secondary cell or rechargeable battery by forcing an electric current
through it.
The charging protocol depends on the
size and type of the battery being charged. Some battery types have high
tolerance for overcharging and can be recharged by connection to a constant
voltage source or a constant current source; simple chargers of this type
require manual disconnection at the end of the charge cycle, or may have a
timer to cut off charging current at a fixed time. Other battery types cannot
withstand long high-rate over-charging; the charger may have temperature or
voltage sensing circuits and a microprocessor controller to adjust the charging
current, and cut off at the end of charge. A trickle charger provides a
relatively small amount of current, only enough to counteract self-discharge of
a battery that is idle for a long time. Slow battery chargers may take several
hours to complete a charge; high-rate chargers may restore most capacity within
minutes or less than an hour, but generally require monitoring of the battery
to protect it from overcharge. Electric vehicles need high-rate chargers for
public access; installation of such chargers and the distribution support for
them is an issue in the proposed adoption of electric cars.
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