Battery Charging: Difference between revisions
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{{merge|XO Troubleshooting Battery}} |
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=Battery Charging= |
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Some of this stuff is obsolete: production XOs are all LiFePO<sub>4</sub>?, info about B-test systems. But other parts seem relevant. Merge with other pages or remove the obsolete redundant info? |
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==Battery status== |
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The current battery status is indicated by the [[XO-1/Software_specification#Battery_LED|Battery LED]]. |
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In [[Sugar]], the battery icon in the frame shows a graphic for battery charge level, and if you move the pointer over it, it displays a percentage charge. |
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==Types of Batteries== |
==Types of Batteries== |
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OLPC |
OLPC originally used two battery chemistries in prototypes: [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nickel-metal_hydride_battery NiMH], and [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lithium_iron_phosphate_battery LiFePO<sub>4</sub>] batteries using technology developed by Yet-Ming Chiang of MIT. The LiFePO<sub>4</sub> batteries allow charging at higher temperatures. The NiMH batteries could not be charged above about 45 degrees C. Production models from 2007 to 2013 use only the LiFePO<sub>4</sub> batteries. Late 2014 may use LiPoly. |
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The LiFePO<sub>4</sub> batteries are lighter than [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nickel_metal_hydride_battery NiMH]. The LiFePO<sub>4</sub> batteries have more capacity because they can be charged to max capacity. In order to achieve 2000 cycles with a NiMH we have to reserve capacity to prevent overcharging. Overcharging significantly reduces the life of a NiMH battery. |
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The batteries are also manufactured by three companies: GoldPeak (LiFePO<sub>4</sub> and NiMH), BYD (LiFePO<sub>4</sub>), and Simplo (LiPoly). To identify: |
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* '''GoldPeak NiMH''' - white sticker |
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The LiFePO4 batteries have labels "Battery sample" on them, and are lighter than NiMH. The LiFePO4 batteries have more capacity because they can be charged to max capacity. In order to achieve 2000 cycles with a NiMH we have to reserve capacity to prevent overcharging. Overcharging significantly reduces the life of a NiMH battery. |
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* '''GoldPeak LiFePO<sub>4</sub>''' - purple sticker |
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* '''BYD LiFePO<sub>4</sub>''' - yellow sticker |
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* '''Simplo LiPoly''' - white sticker |
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== Battery Charging Issues == |
== Battery Charging Issues == |
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[[Image:Power-button.jpg|thumb|right|Power & battery indicators]] |
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Field reports from the BTest-1 and BTest-2 units have have provided us with information on several different types of battery charging issues. The 2 major symptoms are: |
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Field reports from the BTest-1 and BTest-2 units have provided us with information on several different types of battery charging issues. The 2 major symptoms are: |
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# Units that will not power up when a battery is inserted even when plugged into AC.<br> |
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# Batteries that are not recognized/charged.<br> |
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; Symptom 1: This is a hardware problem with BTest-1 systems where a very low battery voltage will prevent the power system from starting up correctly. You can tell this is the case if: |
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: You cannot power up your BTest-1 system with a battery inserted even if its plugged up on AC power. |
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: You insert the battery on a running BTest-1 system and it instantly shuts off. |
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BTest-2 systems do not have this problem and will start up properly. |
BTest-2 systems do not have this problem and will start up properly. |
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; Symptom 2: This is the result of a firmware bug that would corrupt some info stored inside the battery. You can tell this is the case if: |
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: You insert a battery and nothing happens with the battery indicator light. |
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In some cases both symptoms may be present at the same time. |
In some cases both symptoms may be present at the same time. |
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; Symptom 3: Unknown cause (perhaps deeply discharged battery). |
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: B1 laptop won't run without AC power. Inserting battery doesn't crash the system, though. When AC and battery are both plugged in, the system works, the yellow charge light lights, but the battery does not charge. |
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This has been successfully recovered by [[#Manual Charging with Firmware|Manual Charging with Firmware]]. |
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==Recovery of Dead Batteries== |
==Recovery of Dead Batteries== |
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The first step in battery recovery is to upgrade the firmware to B83 or later. Please see [[Autoreinstallation image]] or [[Upgrading |
The first step in battery recovery is to upgrade the firmware to B83 or later. Please see [[Autoreinstallation image]] or [[Upgrading firmware]] for details on how to update your firmware. |
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Additional tools that may be needed: |
Additional tools that may be needed: |
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====BTest-1 Systems==== |
====BTest-1 Systems==== |
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; |
; Step 1 : BTest-1 systems are not capable of trickle charging batteries. If your battery has discharged to a very low capacity then either it can be manually charged with firmware, or it must be externally charged. First see [[#Manual Charging with Firmware|Manual Charging with Firmware]]. If that doesn't work, to recover these batteries please see [[#External Charging|External Charging.]] |
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; |
; Step 2 : Follow the [[#EEPROM Init|EEPROM Init]] procedure. |
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====BTest-2 Systems==== |
====BTest-2 Systems==== |
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; Step 1 : BTest-2 systems can trickle charge. Please insert the battery into a BTest-2 system and leave it plugged up to AC power for 6 hours. Your battery indicator light may or may not light up depending on the status of the EEPROM inside the battery. After you have charged for 6 hours then please follow [[#EEPROM Init|EEPROM Init]]. |
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== EEPROM init == |
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; Step 2 : Follow the [[#EEPROM Init|EEPROM Init]] procedure. |
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== EEPROM Init == |
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''These instructions are for older batteries and older firmware as noted at http://lists.laptop.org/pipermail/community-support/2008-January/001180.html See some new instructions related to an updated version of batman.fth at http://lists.laptop.org/pipermail/community-support/2008-January/001320.html'' |
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The following is a procedure for recovering batteries with corrupted EEPROM info. This procedure requires that the embedded controller (EC) in the laptop be placed into reset. As a result the keyboard and buttons will quit working. Once you follow the procedure you will have to unplug the XO from AC power and remove the battery. |
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If you have a USB keyboard then the power cycle is not necessary. USB keyboards are not affected by the EC and you can reboot by typing 'reboot' at the 'ok' prompt. |
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EEPROM init procedure: |
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# Download the 'batman.fth' recovery program from http://dev.laptop.org/pub/firmware/scripts/batman.fth and save it onto a USB disk in the very top directory. |
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# Put that USB disk into the XO and power up the XO. |
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# Get to the [[Ok]] prompt, |
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# Load the batman.fth program by typing<br><code>fload disk:\batman.fth</code><br> |
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# Run the recover program<br><code>bat-check-and-recover</code><br>This will print out a message indicating what battery type you have and if it has detected that the EEPROM has been corrupted. The following is a sample output from a NiMH battery with a corrupted EEPROM.<br> |
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<code><pre> |
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ok bat-check-and-recover |
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Checking NiMH battery |
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Scaning |
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Battery EEPROM data corrupted... Fixing. |
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Done |
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ok |
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</pre> |
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</code>And one without EEPROM corruption<br> |
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<code><pre> |
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ok bat-check-and-recover |
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Checking NiMH battery |
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Scaning |
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Done |
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ok |
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</pre> |
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</code> |
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* At this stage the laptop keyboard and panel buttons are inoperable so to shut down you must remove AC power and remove the battery. If you are using a USB keyboard then you can type 'kbc-on' which will restart the system. |
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* If you see a message like |
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<pre> |
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bat-check-and-recover ? |
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</pre> |
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try using a different USB stick, or experiment [[Autoreinstallation_image#Possible_Problems|with different USB formats]]. |
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* If you see a message like |
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<pre> |
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No response from battery |
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</pre> |
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Go back and check all your previous steps to make sure you did not miss anything. Check to see that the battery is actually in the laptop. Try re-inserting the battery a couple of times. If you repeatedly get this message then you have a battery that is not recoverable. Please contact someone at OLPC to get a replacement. |
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== Manual Charging with Firmware == |
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This section reports an experiment that has only been done with one laptop (the B1 with Symptom 3 above). It may not work for you. |
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It may make things worse. Caveat emptor. I was running Q2D09 firmware. |
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FLoad the "batman.fth" script as described above, but don't run "bat-check-and-recover". |
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Run "bat-charge". On my B1 machine, this made the machine crash instantly. |
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Power cycle it (you may have to remove both AC and the battery for a bit), and try again. My battery LED went red at this |
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point. On the second try, |
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"bat-charge" didn't crash. |
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Running ".bat-info" (with the leading dot) showed the charge in the ACR gradually creeping up. You can rerun it by pressing |
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the up-arrow and then Enter. |
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I left it charging this way for about ten minutes. |
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After that, I pulled the AC power. The machine kept operating (for the first time in months). ".bat-info" showed the charge |
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going down. I did a full power cycle (power button for 4 seconds, remove AC and battery, hold power button down to discharge |
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any remaining power; then reinsert AC and battery). The battery light came on yellow (charging). When I pressed power-on, |
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the system came up. I stopped it in Forth with Escape, and did "watch-battery", which shows it charged to 12% and continuing |
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to charge. I left it running that way, charging up. |
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It is suggested that "1w-init" be run before "bat-charge". However, I didn't do that the first time. And when I did it the |
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second time, 1w-init crashed the machine and I had to power cycle it. So this is still an experiment. You can try it with, |
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without, whatever; and report your results here. |
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As I write this, the system is able to boot from battery without AC power, watch-battery shows 36%, and I've left it powered off but charging, to get the full charge more quickly than when the laptop is running. The battery appears to be recovering. |
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== External Charging == |
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B1 systems have a hardware problem that prevents them from charging batteries that have discharged to very low levels. To bring the battery capacity back up to a level that a B1 can manage, external methods are necessary. |
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'''WARNING:''' ''If you are not comfortable working with electronics then please seek assistance from someone who is. Even at low capacity these batteries can deliver a significant amount of energy. Shorting the positive and negative terminals with a wire or metal will cause VERY large currents to flow which will burn up smaller wires or metal shims. These can burn you or catch fire. Furthermore, overcharging these batteries will cause them to overheat possibly catching fire. Overcharging or shorting the terminals stresses the battery and significantly reduces the lifetime.'' |
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Special tools needed: |
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* Adjustable voltage power supply with a current limit |
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* Small metal shims to insert into the battery connector. ( [http://www.dse.com.au/isroot/dse/images/products/h3228.jpg Red spade lug] connectors are said to work well. ) |
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==== Battery Terminal Pinout ==== |
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Once removed from the XO, the battery exposes three terminals. The one wire bus is used to program the battery's internal EEPROM, which stores information such as battery state and identification. |
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[[Image:Battery-terminals.jpg|right|XO Battery]] |
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; BLUE : one wire bus |
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; BLACK : negative terminal |
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; RED : positive terminal |
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==== NiMH Batteries ==== |
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The XO NiMH battery has a capacity of 3800 mAH. Slow charging at rates of C/10 (capacity/10) are recommended for external charging without an advanced charging circuit. The manufacturer of the batteries has told us that rates up to C/5 (760 mA) are acceptable for external charging. |
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Using a 3 ~ 15W DC power supply, limit the DC output current to 760mA. Starting at 0V slowly increase the voltage on the battery until you get to some where between 6.5V and 7.3V. The power supply should be in current limit. Charging at currents less than 760mA are fine but it will take longer. Please do not increase the voltage above 7.3V even if you are under the 760mA limit. |
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Charge the battery pack till the CCV (closed circuit voltage) at battery terminals reaches 6.5V and above before plugging it back to XO. You can tell this by setting the supply voltage to 6.5V and looking at the current. If the current is zero or very near zero then you have reached 6.5V. |
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As there is no overcharge control with an external dc power supply, do not charge the battery above the 7.3V voltage limit. |
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=== ToDo === |
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* Charging specs for LiFePO<sub>4</sub> |
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==Long Term Storage== |
==Long Term Storage== |
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Line 52: | Line 185: | ||
As you can see above, letting a battery drain all the way will cause problems when recharging, how severe depends on the circumstances. |
As you can see above, letting a battery drain all the way will cause problems when recharging, how severe depends on the circumstances. |
||
This strategy to remove batteries is true for <b>all</b> battery powered equipment, from flashlights up. Batteries sometimes leak. And some chemistries of Lithium batteries (not |
This strategy to remove batteries is true for <b>all</b> battery powered equipment, from flashlights up. Batteries sometimes leak. And some chemistries of Lithium batteries (not LiFePO<sub>4</sub>) can get into a metastable state where they cannot be recharged. |
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== External Charging == |
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[[Category:Hardware]] |
[[Category:Hardware]] |
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[[Category:Battery & Power]] |
Latest revision as of 22:43, 29 October 2014
Some of this stuff is obsolete: production XOs are all LiFePO4?, info about B-test systems. But other parts seem relevant. Merge with other pages or remove the obsolete redundant info?
Battery status
The current battery status is indicated by the Battery LED.
In Sugar, the battery icon in the frame shows a graphic for battery charge level, and if you move the pointer over it, it displays a percentage charge.
Types of Batteries
OLPC originally used two battery chemistries in prototypes: NiMH, and LiFePO4 batteries using technology developed by Yet-Ming Chiang of MIT. The LiFePO4 batteries allow charging at higher temperatures. The NiMH batteries could not be charged above about 45 degrees C. Production models from 2007 to 2013 use only the LiFePO4 batteries. Late 2014 may use LiPoly.
The LiFePO4 batteries are lighter than NiMH. The LiFePO4 batteries have more capacity because they can be charged to max capacity. In order to achieve 2000 cycles with a NiMH we have to reserve capacity to prevent overcharging. Overcharging significantly reduces the life of a NiMH battery.
The batteries are also manufactured by three companies: GoldPeak (LiFePO4 and NiMH), BYD (LiFePO4), and Simplo (LiPoly). To identify:
- GoldPeak NiMH - white sticker
- GoldPeak LiFePO4 - purple sticker
- BYD LiFePO4 - yellow sticker
- Simplo LiPoly - white sticker
Battery Charging Issues
Field reports from the BTest-1 and BTest-2 units have provided us with information on several different types of battery charging issues. The 2 major symptoms are:
- Units that will not power up when a battery is inserted even when plugged into AC.
- Batteries that are not recognized/charged.
- Symptom 1
- This is a hardware problem with BTest-1 systems where a very low battery voltage will prevent the power system from starting up correctly. You can tell this is the case if:
- You cannot power up your BTest-1 system with a battery inserted even if its plugged up on AC power.
- You insert the battery on a running BTest-1 system and it instantly shuts off.
BTest-2 systems do not have this problem and will start up properly.
- Symptom 2
- This is the result of a firmware bug that would corrupt some info stored inside the battery. You can tell this is the case if:
- You insert a battery and nothing happens with the battery indicator light.
In some cases both symptoms may be present at the same time.
- Symptom 3
- Unknown cause (perhaps deeply discharged battery).
- B1 laptop won't run without AC power. Inserting battery doesn't crash the system, though. When AC and battery are both plugged in, the system works, the yellow charge light lights, but the battery does not charge.
This has been successfully recovered by Manual Charging with Firmware.
Recovery of Dead Batteries
The first step in battery recovery is to upgrade the firmware to B83 or later. Please see Autoreinstallation image or Upgrading firmware for details on how to update your firmware.
Additional tools that may be needed:
- USB keyboard.
Once you have upgraded then the exact methods depend on what system you have.
BTest-1 Systems
- Step 1
- BTest-1 systems are not capable of trickle charging batteries. If your battery has discharged to a very low capacity then either it can be manually charged with firmware, or it must be externally charged. First see Manual Charging with Firmware. If that doesn't work, to recover these batteries please see External Charging.
- Step 2
- Follow the EEPROM Init procedure.
BTest-2 Systems
- Step 1
- BTest-2 systems can trickle charge. Please insert the battery into a BTest-2 system and leave it plugged up to AC power for 6 hours. Your battery indicator light may or may not light up depending on the status of the EEPROM inside the battery. After you have charged for 6 hours then please follow EEPROM Init.
- Step 2
- Follow the EEPROM Init procedure.
EEPROM Init
These instructions are for older batteries and older firmware as noted at http://lists.laptop.org/pipermail/community-support/2008-January/001180.html See some new instructions related to an updated version of batman.fth at http://lists.laptop.org/pipermail/community-support/2008-January/001320.html
The following is a procedure for recovering batteries with corrupted EEPROM info. This procedure requires that the embedded controller (EC) in the laptop be placed into reset. As a result the keyboard and buttons will quit working. Once you follow the procedure you will have to unplug the XO from AC power and remove the battery.
If you have a USB keyboard then the power cycle is not necessary. USB keyboards are not affected by the EC and you can reboot by typing 'reboot' at the 'ok' prompt.
EEPROM init procedure:
- Download the 'batman.fth' recovery program from http://dev.laptop.org/pub/firmware/scripts/batman.fth and save it onto a USB disk in the very top directory.
- Put that USB disk into the XO and power up the XO.
- Get to the Ok prompt,
- Load the batman.fth program by typing
fload disk:\batman.fth
- Run the recover program
bat-check-and-recover
This will print out a message indicating what battery type you have and if it has detected that the EEPROM has been corrupted. The following is a sample output from a NiMH battery with a corrupted EEPROM.
ok bat-check-and-recover
Checking NiMH battery
Scaning
Battery EEPROM data corrupted... Fixing.
Done
ok
And one without EEPROM corruption
ok bat-check-and-recover
Checking NiMH battery
Scaning
Done
ok
- At this stage the laptop keyboard and panel buttons are inoperable so to shut down you must remove AC power and remove the battery. If you are using a USB keyboard then you can type 'kbc-on' which will restart the system.
- If you see a message like
bat-check-and-recover ?
try using a different USB stick, or experiment with different USB formats.
- If you see a message like
No response from battery
Go back and check all your previous steps to make sure you did not miss anything. Check to see that the battery is actually in the laptop. Try re-inserting the battery a couple of times. If you repeatedly get this message then you have a battery that is not recoverable. Please contact someone at OLPC to get a replacement.
Manual Charging with Firmware
This section reports an experiment that has only been done with one laptop (the B1 with Symptom 3 above). It may not work for you. It may make things worse. Caveat emptor. I was running Q2D09 firmware.
FLoad the "batman.fth" script as described above, but don't run "bat-check-and-recover".
Run "bat-charge". On my B1 machine, this made the machine crash instantly. Power cycle it (you may have to remove both AC and the battery for a bit), and try again. My battery LED went red at this point. On the second try, "bat-charge" didn't crash. Running ".bat-info" (with the leading dot) showed the charge in the ACR gradually creeping up. You can rerun it by pressing the up-arrow and then Enter. I left it charging this way for about ten minutes.
After that, I pulled the AC power. The machine kept operating (for the first time in months). ".bat-info" showed the charge going down. I did a full power cycle (power button for 4 seconds, remove AC and battery, hold power button down to discharge any remaining power; then reinsert AC and battery). The battery light came on yellow (charging). When I pressed power-on, the system came up. I stopped it in Forth with Escape, and did "watch-battery", which shows it charged to 12% and continuing to charge. I left it running that way, charging up.
It is suggested that "1w-init" be run before "bat-charge". However, I didn't do that the first time. And when I did it the second time, 1w-init crashed the machine and I had to power cycle it. So this is still an experiment. You can try it with, without, whatever; and report your results here.
As I write this, the system is able to boot from battery without AC power, watch-battery shows 36%, and I've left it powered off but charging, to get the full charge more quickly than when the laptop is running. The battery appears to be recovering.
External Charging
B1 systems have a hardware problem that prevents them from charging batteries that have discharged to very low levels. To bring the battery capacity back up to a level that a B1 can manage, external methods are necessary.
WARNING: If you are not comfortable working with electronics then please seek assistance from someone who is. Even at low capacity these batteries can deliver a significant amount of energy. Shorting the positive and negative terminals with a wire or metal will cause VERY large currents to flow which will burn up smaller wires or metal shims. These can burn you or catch fire. Furthermore, overcharging these batteries will cause them to overheat possibly catching fire. Overcharging or shorting the terminals stresses the battery and significantly reduces the lifetime.
Special tools needed:
- Adjustable voltage power supply with a current limit
- Small metal shims to insert into the battery connector. ( Red spade lug connectors are said to work well. )
Battery Terminal Pinout
Once removed from the XO, the battery exposes three terminals. The one wire bus is used to program the battery's internal EEPROM, which stores information such as battery state and identification.
- BLUE
- one wire bus
- BLACK
- negative terminal
- RED
- positive terminal
NiMH Batteries
The XO NiMH battery has a capacity of 3800 mAH. Slow charging at rates of C/10 (capacity/10) are recommended for external charging without an advanced charging circuit. The manufacturer of the batteries has told us that rates up to C/5 (760 mA) are acceptable for external charging.
Using a 3 ~ 15W DC power supply, limit the DC output current to 760mA. Starting at 0V slowly increase the voltage on the battery until you get to some where between 6.5V and 7.3V. The power supply should be in current limit. Charging at currents less than 760mA are fine but it will take longer. Please do not increase the voltage above 7.3V even if you are under the 760mA limit.
Charge the battery pack till the CCV (closed circuit voltage) at battery terminals reaches 6.5V and above before plugging it back to XO. You can tell this by setting the supply voltage to 6.5V and looking at the current. If the current is zero or very near zero then you have reached 6.5V.
As there is no overcharge control with an external dc power supply, do not charge the battery above the 7.3V voltage limit.
ToDo
- Charging specs for LiFePO4
Long Term Storage
If you plan to store a system for many weeks or months, your best strategy is to fully charge the battery and remove the battery from the laptop. Batteries naturally lose charge with time (how fast depends on the battery and its chemistry), and the embedded controller in the laptop, while sipping tiny amounts of power in its low power state, will drain the battery faster. Even though BTest-2 systems should now always be able to recover batteries that are fully discharged (except those noted above), it is a trickle charge process and time consuming.
As you can see above, letting a battery drain all the way will cause problems when recharging, how severe depends on the circumstances.
This strategy to remove batteries is true for all battery powered equipment, from flashlights up. Batteries sometimes leak. And some chemistries of Lithium batteries (not LiFePO4) can get into a metastable state where they cannot be recharged.