m@Robertson
Well-Known Member
- Region
- USA
Oh and this article that you are posting over and over again... It doesn't say what you want people to think it says. Either that or you didn't read past the title.
There were two research studies in 2013 that noted the li ion memory effect. One was the study I already linked (not a clickbait article... the actual study) and the other one was a joint project done by Toyota and Paul Scherer Institute. Here's the part you missed:
BOTH of them focused solely on LiFePo4. That would be the battery chemistry virtually none of us have in our ebikes here. And the article you linked also says that the effect is temporary, which someone will know if they actually read the article rather than see the headline and assume it supports the agenda you are pushing.
Here are a couple of quotes from your cited source:
And something the short summary article I cited revealed is also in your source, quoted by the study's lead:
It also goes into how a BMS can be designed for LiFePo4 packs that handles the resting phase automatically.
So lets review:
The two studies that discovered the effect were in 2013 and a lot has happened in those 9 years insofar as battery management systems are concerned. I know my solar generator that uses LiFePo4 cells that was manufactured in 2022 has a BMS that overcomes this issue (I know because I asked).
Memory effect now also found in lithium-ion batteries
Due to their high energy density, lithium-ion batteries are used in many commercial electronic appliances. They are also believed to exhibit no memory effect. That’s how experts call a deviation in the voltage of the battery that can limit the usability of the stored energy as well as the...
www.sciencedaily.com
There were two research studies in 2013 that noted the li ion memory effect. One was the study I already linked (not a clickbait article... the actual study) and the other one was a joint project done by Toyota and Paul Scherer Institute. Here's the part you missed:
BOTH of them focused solely on LiFePo4. That would be the battery chemistry virtually none of us have in our ebikes here. And the article you linked also says that the effect is temporary, which someone will know if they actually read the article rather than see the headline and assume it supports the agenda you are pushing.
Here are a couple of quotes from your cited source:
Scientists have found that idling a sufficiently long period of time can be used to erase the memory effect.
And something the short summary article I cited revealed is also in your source, quoted by the study's lead:
According to Professor Petr Novak, Head of the Electrochemical Energy Storage Section at the PSI and co-author of the publication ... The effect is in fact tiny: the relative deviation in voltage is just a few parts per thousand.
It also goes into how a BMS can be designed for LiFePo4 packs that handles the resting phase automatically.
So lets review:
- li ion memory effect is something that happens to a type of battery that ebikes do not use
- The effect is temporary
- The effect is tiny
The two studies that discovered the effect were in 2013 and a lot has happened in those 9 years insofar as battery management systems are concerned. I know my solar generator that uses LiFePo4 cells that was manufactured in 2022 has a BMS that overcomes this issue (I know because I asked).