Pure Sine Wave Inverter using Two Lithium Ion Batteries

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the design and implementation of a pure sine wave inverter using two lithium-ion batteries. Participants explore various aspects including battery capacity, load requirements, and the implications of using Battery Management Systems (BMS) in the setup. The conversation includes technical considerations, potential issues with current flow, and safety standards related to the components used.

Discussion Character

  • Technical explanation
  • Debate/contested
  • Exploratory

Main Points Raised

  • One participant mentions using 23Ah lithium-ion batteries with built-in BMS, questioning how the inverter interacts with the batteries during charging.
  • Concerns are raised about the start-up current of appliances like refrigerators and whether the inverter can handle the load.
  • Another participant discusses the flow of electrons and current in batteries, expressing uncertainty about potential damage to fully charged batteries when charging a depleted one.
  • There are suggestions to operate the batteries individually to avoid complications with the BMS.
  • Participants discuss the importance of UL approval for the design and components used, with some expressing skepticism about the necessity of such approvals for personal projects.
  • One participant proposes a switchboard design to manage the charging and load distribution between the batteries and inverter.
  • Concerns about using lithium-ion batteries for high inrush current applications are mentioned, suggesting that lead-acid batteries might be more suitable for certain loads.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express multiple competing views regarding the best practices for battery management, the necessity of UL approval, and the suitability of lithium-ion versus lead-acid batteries for specific applications. The discussion remains unresolved on several technical points, particularly regarding the implications of current flow and the design of the inverter system.

Contextual Notes

Participants highlight limitations in their understanding of current flow and battery management systems, indicating a need for further clarification on these topics. There are also unresolved questions about the operational configuration of the batteries and inverter.

Who May Find This Useful

This discussion may be useful for individuals interested in building portable power systems, those exploring battery technology, and participants looking for insights into inverter design and safety standards.

Cody1944
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TL;DR
Hello All, I am a licensed electrical contractor and have just now started to build portable ac power generators, would appreciate some opinions on this design.
My thoughts were to operate Batt 1 & Batt 2 Individually, to eliminate the need for a BMS.
However I am not certain this is the most desirable wiring method. I am curious if the Charger will work in this config.
Thank You
looking forward to a professional discussion.
Cody
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Welcome to PF.
That looks like it might work.
What capacity batteries will you use?
What is the load on the sinewave inverter?
 
Hello Baluncore
I am using 23ah Lithium Ion Batteries, each has its own BMS built in.
The Inverter is a 600w, the intended load is end table lamps/standard refrigerator/cordless tool battery recharging/recharge electric bike batteries, small power tools/laptops/phones ...a stand alone unit for emergency power
My concern was is it possible electrons could flow into the fully charged battery and the inverter somehow while charging the depleted battery ? One thought is to build a bigger case and Just install two complete Individual systems.
here are some specs on the batteries,
Dakota Lithium 12v 23Ah Battery - Half the Weight & Twice the Power
 
Cody1944 said:
I am using 23ah Lithium Ion Batteries, each has its own BMS built in.
If that's true, then the two BMS will control how much current is allowed into the batteries, not the inverter power supply. Therefore, the inverter doesn't matter.I'm assuming that BMS means Battery Management System.
 
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Cody1944 said:
The Inverter is a 600w, the intended load is end table lamps/standard refrigerator/cordless tool battery recharging/recharge electric bike batteries, small power tools/laptops/phones ...a stand alone unit for emergency power
Have you considered the start-up current of your refrigerator? Are your other appliances okay with losing power for the second or two that the 600W inverter will struggle to put out 10A or so...?

https://findanyanswer.com/how-many-amps-does-a-refrigerator-draw-on-startup
 
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anorlunda said:
If that's true, then the two BMS will control how much current is allowed into the batteries, not the inverter power supply. Therefore, the inverter doesn't matter.I'm assuming that BMS means Battery Management System.

I read that current flow in a battery is positive to negative, but electron flow is negative to positive, so will electrons flow from the negative on the charger, to the negative on both Batts, and then flow inside both Batts to the positive posts, causing some type of damage to the fully charged Battery.

So With independent BMS it should not cause any undesired conditions ?
 
berkeman said:
Have you considered the start-up current of your refrigerator? Are your other appliances okay with losing power for the second or two that the 600W inverter will struggle to put out 10A or so...?

https://findanyanswer.com/how-many-amps-does-a-refrigerator-draw-on-startup
All of these devices will only be used one at a time
Its my first build so I built it primarily to recharge cordless tools, but realize it has more potential than that.
 
Cody1944 said:
I read that current flow in a battery is positive to negative, but electron flow is negative to positive, so will electrons flow from the negative on the charger, to the negative on both Batts, and then flow inside both Batts to the positive posts, causing some type of damage to the fully charged Battery.

So With independent BMS it should not cause any undesired conditions ?
Don't burden your thinking with electron flow. At your level of design, just thing in terms of positive current flow. :smile:
 
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Baluncore said:
Welcome to PF.
That looks like it might work.
What capacity batteries will you use?
What is the load on the sinewave inverter?
I must be getting punchy in my older years, I just realized If I close both switches my batts are in parallel with each other.
 
  • #10
berkeman said:
Don't burden your thinking with electron flow. At your level of design, just thing in terms of positive current flow. :smile:
Ok Thank You
 
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  • #11
Cody1944 said:
I just realized If I close both switches my batts are in parallel with each other.
If that was a problem you could use a 10 amp, two pole, two position switch, wired to cross over the batteries.
 
  • #12
Please do not for this use a design that is not UL approved.
 
  • #13
berkeman said:
Don't burden your thinking with electron flow.
Don't think negative. B+ve.
 
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  • #14
Cody1944 said:
Summary:: Hello All, I am a licensed electrical contractor and have just now started to build portable ac power generators, would appreciate some opinions on this design.
My thoughts were to operate Batt 1 & Batt 2 Individually, to eliminate the need for a BMS.
However I am not certain this is the most desirable wiring method. I am curious if the Charger will work in this config.
Thank You
looking forward to a professional discussion.
Cody

View attachment 273935

basically, this would be what your circuit would look like if you integrated all those components into one portable unit:

1607518597590.png

assuming you all had the circuit protections and the approriate groundings in place, that switchboard is basically a black box at the moment, depending on what you want it to do (in your drawing, it's basically just two switches connected between battery and inverter).

basically it's at least a 5-port switchboard whose number of switches and wiring complexity is determined by what kind of switching you'd want to be able to do (you could always screw and then unscrew your charger if you want, but assuming you want to deploy your portable generator, and then charge it after as needed, without further modifications to the circuit, making your own little switchboard would be the way to go.).

so, time for some rules:
1) how do you want your batteries to charge? one at a time? or can your charger handle both at the same time? are both batteries load-carrying, or is one kept only for back-up?
2) do you want the option to operate the charger and inverter at the same time? like charging battery 1 while battery 2 supplies load? or do both of the batteries supply load together at one instance and get charged together afterwards, as needed?
3) anything else you might want the switchboard to be able to do?

cheers!
 
  • #15
Regarding the usage of LiPo batteries: there is a reason why UPS setups still has Lead-Acid batteries, and that's the insane short term overcurrent capacity. If you plan to run any inductive load (like that refrigerator) through your setup then you would do better with simply buying an used UPS which has external battery connectors and is able to start up independently.
 
  • #16
sysprog said:
Please do not for this use a design that is not UL approved.
What are you talking about? All of my components are UL Listed.
 
  • #17
Cody1944 said:
What are you talking about? All of my components are UL Listed.
Quiz Question -- what is the difference between a UL Listed component and a UL Approved device? :wink:
 
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  • #18
berkeman said:
Quiz Question -- what is the difference between a UL Listed component and a UL Approved device? :wink:
Thanks for beating me to that, @berkeman ##-## maybe the difference could mean not getting zapped ##-## a great guy that I knew who worked as an engineer for the City Water Department in Chicago had before then had a long career with UL ##-## according to him, some of the most excellently inventive assemblages were among those that didn't pass muster ##\dots##
 
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  • #19
Yeah, I've been involved in both kinds of certifications with UL.

I can definitely start a fire with UL certified components, but none of my UL certified devices has ever caught fire...
 
  • #20
sysprog said:
Thanks for beating me to that, @berkeman ##-## maybe the difference could mean not getting zapped ##-## a great guy that I knew who worked as an engineer for the City Water Department in Chicago had before then had a long career with UL ##-## according to him, some of the most excellently inventive assemblages were among those that didn't pass muster ##\dots##
So everyone who buys an inverter and installs it into their truck needs to have that installation UL Approved I don't think so.
 
  • #21
Cody1944 said:
So everyone who buys an inverter and installs it into their truck needs to have that installation UL Approved I don't think so.
Sure. Go to your local auto part store and check the labels. Duh.
 
  • #22
I interviewed with UL as a college senior. I sometimes wonder if that choice would have been boring or fulfilling.

I also interviewed Wurlitzer Organ Company, and interviewed Disney for an "imagineer" position, and interviewed with Dr. Van de Graaff at his company High Voltage Engineering.
 
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  • #23
That's super-cool @anorlunda ##-## my Grandfather (who was Major, Corps of Engineers, WWI, and Lt. Col., Chief, North African Sector, OSS, WWII), told me that he gave Van De Graff an early lesson in Physics ##-## VDG, who was about 5 years old at the time, was interested in rockets, and on seeing the exhaust from a passing automobile, asked Grandpa, who was then maybe 12 years old, how does the gas from that little pipe push that big car so fast, and Grandpa smiled and told VDG about internal combustion engines.
 
  • #24
Cody1944 said:
So everyone who buys an inverter and installs it into their truck needs to have that installation UL Approved I don't think so.
Please, @Cody1944 , that's not what I was advocating ##-## I said
Please do not for this use a design that is not UL approved.
That's just a caution in reference to not using a design that is not UL approved ##-## it's not a caution as to exactly how you install things -- I'm confident that it's well and broadly understood that UL doesn't evaluate the safety and correctness of each specific instance of an inverter install ##\dots##
 
  • #25
I have worked in Industrial, Nuclear and Commercial Electrical Construction environments for 40 years, I was an Electrical Inspector for the Automatic Train Control System for the most complicated electric trains in the world for 10 years. UL is not the know all be all of Electrical Work.
 
  • #26
Cody1944 said:
I have worked in Industrial, Nuclear and Commercial Electrical Construction environments for 40 years, I was an Electrical Inspector for the Automatic Train Control System for the most complicated electric trains in the world for 10 years. UL is not the know all be all of Electrical Work.
That's a very impressive work history, @Cody1944; however, I think that UL doesn't hold itself out to the public as "know all be all" ##-## wasn't it originally a service group for insurance underwriters ##-## isn't the main mission of UL to foster product safety?
 
  • #27
anorlunda said:
... interviewed with Dr. Van de Graaff at his company High Voltage Engineering.
Wow. Having worked with my universities 4 Mev Van de Graaff generator(no longer there), I would have "given my right arm" for that opportunity.
 
  • #28
dlgoff said:
Wow. Having worked with my universities 4 Mev Van de Graaff generator(no longer there), I would have "given my right arm" for that opportunity.
When I was in HS Science Class someone grounded me out with an alligator clip wire the other end of which was connected to a water tap and I thought why are you grounding me out, and then someone else suddenly attached me to another alligator clip wire that was connected to the top of the running VDG generator and I got a brief jolt ##-## I laughed off the prank, but also said that attaching the wire from the VDG generator didn't continue the zap, as was apparently intended by at least one of the pranksters, because the globe was an accumulator that became depleted immediately on first contact ##-## the belt rubbing against the copper comb wasn't enough to deliver a steady charge.
 
Last edited:
  • #29
sysprog said:
the belt rubbing against the copper comb
Actually, there's no contact between the comb and belt.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Van_de_Graaff_generator said:
"...the form of comb-shaped rows of sharp metal points, are positioned near the bottom of the lower roller ...

bold by me
 
  • #30
@dlgoff , I think that you're right about the Van De Graff generator design, but in order to avoid fussing about the exact belt-to-comb distance, in my school 'they' used 'slightly touching' instead of 'near' ##-## it was more wear on the belt, but I imagine that the teacher found it easier to explain it that way (avoided induction discussion).
 
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