Simple answer = No!
Low charge = bad for cell health is a residual notion from the lead acid battery technology. Batteries from Yamaha, Brose, Bosch, Shimano have Low Voltage Cutoff point and they prevent any irreversible damage happening. Having said that, ideal would be to store your battery at 40-60%.
Hi Ravi. I'm glad you answered
Because I've been meaning to ask this question, and it would be great to also have a complex answer to help me understand something
So I believe that the problem is:
Electrolyte oxidation products build up on the negative electrode.
The more buildup, the less capacity the cell will have.
The higher the cell voltage, the faster the buildup happens.
The speed of the buildup is also accelerated with higher temperatures
And the total amount of buildup is thus proportional to the voltage, the temperature, and the time the cell spends in this 'elevated' state. Which is why its bad to charge to 100%, and leave it in this state for an extended period. Especially somewhere hot!
And I think (but I'm not an expert here, hence why I'm asking!), that the reason the Oxidisation happens, is that when the cell is charged, the (very active) lithium ions have effectively migrated over to the negative electrode.
So thinking on that, a simple theory would be that at a low charge level (say 5-10%), there would be a minimum amount of ions over on the negative, so the buildup of oxidation products there (on the negative) should be happening at the slowest level. Which suggests that storing at as low a voltage as possible (say 5-10%) would be the preferable level?
But people don't recommend that. They tend to say, as you have, store around the 40-60%. Why?
is it because you then have some leeway then if you DO forget to charge the battery for months, and thus the self discharge isn't going to cause the cells to fall to dangerously low voltage levels (or in some cases stop the BMS itself from functioning) ?
Or is there some other chemical reaction going on? I mean - if the cell is discharged, then it suggests that now, the lithium ions have mostly migrated over to the POSITIVE electrode. Do they cause some similar oxidization process over at that terminal now instead of the negative one? so storing around the 50% mark means the ions are kind of swimming in the middle of the electrolyte, instead of being concentrated at one pole?
I ask because I often come home after a long ride and I'm on the last bar of my battery. I know I'm going to use the bike within a week or two, so there is no chance of it self discharging to a dangerous, unrecoverable level in that time, but because of the above, I don't know if leaving it in the 5-10% charged range is causing the same amount of permanent degradation, as storing it for the same time at 90-95% charge !?!