iPhone Battery dc-ac circuit

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • liamoc74
    Senior Member
    • Feb 2015
    • 80
    • Ireland

    #1

    iPhone Battery dc-ac circuit

    Hi all,

    Ive an astronomical amount of old iPhone batteries, not good enough for phones and just sitting there. I own a phone repair business so will also have a constant supply of them. They all have power in them too, well most of them.

    How would I go about building a circuit with a DC-AC inverter so I could power some household stuff(i'm actually thinking about a mining rig :/) with these?
    Could I build little packs out of them and hook them into the circuit as needed?

    Any ideas welcome - just a thought... but a project i'm definitely going to give some time too as the batteries are just building up and its not going to stop..

    Thanks,
    Liam
  • eccerr0r
    Solder Sloth
    • Nov 2012
    • 8696
    • USA

    #2
    Re: iPhone Battery dc-ac circuit

    They're batteries, not power sources, once they deplete, they won't supply any more power. And likely they won't be holding more than a watt hour per battery (they ARE dead, aren't they?)

    Or do you mean you want to make a very poor density battery pack to just store energy? Even this will be tough as the batteries are in such poor condition that you'll need to parallel and series them to get enough voltage, but if you do that you'll also need to somehow balance them.

    If you find a way to balance them and you have...hundreds of them...

    Because they are "poor" and "unknown" condition I'd build packs of probably at least 10 in parallel. Mix and match these cells in 10-packs so that you have 42 of these packs (420 cells). You'll need to make sure each of these 42 packs have exactly the same capacity. Connect these 42 packs in series and now you have a large ~168V battery.

    Then comes the electrical part: With a microcontroller and a bunch of P and N MOSFETs you want to make an modified sinewave H-bridge. Make sure you drop to 0 for a while just like the modified sinewave inverters.


    If you don't want to do this, you can always just pack them to a large 12V battery and use an off-the-shelf inverter. You still need to balance them however.

    The balancing in either case will be the difficult part as if you screw up, expect your whole pack and anything nearby to be:
    Last edited by eccerr0r; 10-07-2017, 07:36 PM. Reason: Solution to puzzle.

    Comment

    • momaka
      master hoarder
      • May 2008
      • 12170
      • Bulgaria

      #3
      Re: iPhone Battery dc-ac circuit

      Building a large battery pack with old tired Lithium batteries = sure way to start a fire!

      That said, any self-respecting pyro should have attempted that at least once in his/her career by now.

      Comment

      • CapLeaker
        Leaking Member
        • Dec 2014
        • 8119
        • Canada

        #4
        Re: iPhone Battery dc-ac circuit

        it's a good idea at first, but yet not. On top of that, you would have to control each cell. Not worth friggin around with old cell phone batteries to make a Frankenstein battery bank in a big scale.

        Comment

        • liamoc74
          Senior Member
          • Feb 2015
          • 80
          • Ireland

          #5
          Re: iPhone Battery dc-ac circuit

          Ahhhh this all sounds so mad scientist like and good.. exactly what i wanted to hear!!
          I'm not sure how or what I want to do but its just a shame having all that power just sitting there and not putting it to some use..

          i think building the 12v packs and an off the shelf inverter would be the best way to start or else i'll just end up blowing the whole village to pieces which is probably best avoided.

          What sparked the idea initially is the crypto mining rig i have, i was wondering how i could power it for free and basically get free crypto - then i thought of the batteries.
          theyre not all dead, alot of them would have been replaced because they had so many cycles etc and power off at a certain percent but when replaced they still had power in them.

          ive two retail stores so were constantly getting old batteries with power in them, if i could build them in packs, and then just rig them into the system to extract the power and then i could dispose of them dead.

          Is it possible, am i raving? could we build it on a small scale to power just a laptop for any amount of time and then build it bigger to power a full mining rig..
          if it worked it would be pretty cool in fairness...

          Comment

          • eccerr0r
            Solder Sloth
            • Nov 2012
            • 8696
            • USA

            #6
            Re: iPhone Battery dc-ac circuit

            There is likely not enough power in them to be worth the effort. The power you use to solder everything together is likely more than how much remaining power you'll get out of the batteries, unless you were planning to use your pack to steal power from somewhere else.

            Comment

            • liamoc74
              Senior Member
              • Feb 2015
              • 80
              • Ireland

              #7
              Re: iPhone Battery dc-ac circuit

              OK.. Ill grab 10 at random right now and throw the multi meter on them and see whats in them..

              Comment

              • liamoc74
                Senior Member
                • Feb 2015
                • 80
                • Ireland

                #8
                Re: iPhone Battery dc-ac circuit

                - 3.8V
                - 3.7V
                - 3.7V
                - 3.7V
                - 3.9V
                - 3.9V
                - 2.2V
                - 0.1V
                - 3.9V
                - 0.7V

                The average on this batch of 10 is 6.45Whr, stamped on each battery..

                Comment

                • liamoc74
                  Senior Member
                  • Feb 2015
                  • 80
                  • Ireland

                  #9
                  Re: iPhone Battery dc-ac circuit

                  - 3.8V
                  - 3.7V
                  - 3.7V
                  - 3.7V
                  - 3.9V
                  - 3.9V
                  - 2.2V
                  - 0.1V
                  - 3.9V
                  - 0.7V

                  So thats 29.6V in total, 2.96V Av per battery..

                  The average on this batch of 10 is 6.45Whr, stamped on each battery..

                  Comment

                  • CapLeaker
                    Leaking Member
                    • Dec 2014
                    • 8119
                    • Canada

                    #10
                    Re: iPhone Battery dc-ac circuit

                    Only because they have 6.45Whr stamped on there, doesn't mean they actually have it. After all they are all used and they must have had suffered capacity loss, because that is the reason they got changed out first place. Whatever you decide to do, you have to be able to charge and discharge the cells individually. If you don't, it's gonna blow sooner than later. So be aware what you are doing with that type of battery chemistry. Also your battery back voltage (lets say those 10) will be all over the place, since all batteries are going to be different.

                    you will find out soon that this project cost more and the risk of fire is higher than what it is worth, to power something large scale for a period of time. You've got quite a bit of reading to do.
                    Last edited by CapLeaker; 10-14-2017, 10:52 AM.

                    Comment

                    • budm
                      Badcaps Legend
                      • Feb 2010
                      • 40746
                      • USA

                      #11
                      Re: iPhone Battery dc-ac circuit

                      Testing batteries without loads does not really tell the true condition of the batteries.
                      Never stop learning
                      Basic LCD TV and Monitor troubleshooting guides.
                      http://www.badcaps.net/forum/showthr...956#post305956

                      Voltage Regulator (LDO) testing:
                      http://www.badcaps.net/forum/showthr...999#post300999

                      Inverter testing using old CFL:
                      http://www.badcaps.net/forum/showthr...er+testing+cfl

                      Tear down pictures : Hit the ">" Show Albums and stories" on the left side
                      http://s807.photobucket.com/user/budm/library/

                      TV Factory reset codes listing:
                      http://www.badcaps.net/forum/showthread.php?t=24809

                      Comment

                      • momaka
                        master hoarder
                        • May 2008
                        • 12170
                        • Bulgaria

                        #12
                        Re: iPhone Battery dc-ac circuit

                        Originally posted by eccerr0r
                        There is likely not enough power in them to be worth the effort. The power you use to solder everything together is likely more than how much remaining power you'll get out of the batteries, unless you were planning to use your pack to steal power from somewhere else.
                        OMG! It's like you took these thoughts away from my head! I was thinking about posting that all day today.

                        I guess we are square now, as I did take that JEE joke away from you in that Deer thread.
                        https://www.badcaps.net/forum/showthread.php?t=64563

                        Comment

                        • eccerr0r
                          Solder Sloth
                          • Nov 2012
                          • 8696
                          • USA

                          #13
                          Re: iPhone Battery dc-ac circuit

                          Well, the question needed to be asked when the physics doesn't quite make sense

                          Comment

                          Related Topics

                          Collapse

                          • Astonished
                            Fixing the Charge Circuit of the Batteries of the DC Motor
                            by Astonished
                            Hi friends of electronics

                            What you see in the video and pictures attached is the circuit for charging the batteries of a DC motor.

                            The problem is that this circuit cannot charge the batteries (3 1800mAH NiMH batteries) any more. When the circuit was OK, its green LEDs lit up one at a time to show that the batteries have charged more. But now that the circuit is flawed, LEDs light up as you see in the video and at the same time successive beeps are heard.

                            Please help me fix this circuit.

                            (the datasheet of the IC: https://pdf.datasheet.live/28...
                            01-28-2025, 06:24 AM
                          • carrzkiss
                            Cyberpower cps1500avr not charging batteries
                            by carrzkiss
                            Hello, all.

                            Cyberpower Battery Backup Unit.

                            I bought two new ML18-12 batteries through Amazon (They have already refunded my money for the two batteries as we thought the batteries might have been bad.)
                            When I got them in, they were not fully charged. I connected them to the UPS and waited 24 hours before connecting any networking equipment.
                            In parallel, they read 24v, but within 24 hours, the meter on the front of the unit dropped from 4 to 3 bars on the battery charge indicator.
                            Checking the voltage, it was down to 22v.
                            I quickly removed everything...
                            06-15-2024, 02:10 PM
                          • rddube
                            Lenovo L490 Ram voltage circuit malfunction
                            by rddube
                            Hello friends,

                            Looking for some guidance here. The RAM voltage circuit on this motherboard keeps burning out PU301 which is a RT8231AGQW. Copy of the board with the burnt chip attached with some voltage measurements and copy of the schematics also included.

                            I think I've checked almost every component in the circuit, but when I change the RT8231, the laptop starts I have 1.2V on the inductor for about 10 seconds and then the RT8231 goes south and no more voltage on the inductor. All other voltages on the laptop are good, this is the only one conking out for a reason I...
                            07-15-2025, 04:41 PM
                          • dbuergi
                            DIY: Modified smart charger for all types of batteries
                            by dbuergi
                            Hi all,

                            sometimes i'm in need of a charger / tester for very small batteries and even if my multimeter doesn't show anything there is a chance that a smart charger helps to revieve. I'm happy with my Keenstone smartcharger and i made a small mod just to use it with smaller batteries like in smartwatches or even camera batteries with special contacts.

                            Soldering wires on the charger contacts and using needles as probes. I covered both with a shrink hose with integrated solder.
                            My first work was to bring my Samsung watch battery back to life with was not recognized...
                            07-18-2025, 03:17 AM
                          • M1NEBLANK SHOW
                            MSI B250 Gaming M3 Short circuit in CPU power supply circuit
                            by M1NEBLANK SHOW
                            Hello. MSI B250 Gaming M3 board, short-circuit on the power supply. Found a problematic mosfet VQ1
                            (N-PK616BA_PDFN8-HF) soldered it out - short circuit is gone. I replaced VQ1 + VQ5 (N-PK632BA_PDFN8-HF). VQ1 was replaced with PK618. After starting attempt VQ1 is lit again. What can be the problem? In the driver?

                            Schematic and Boardview here
                            ...
                            04-04-2025, 03:57 PM
                          • Loading...
                          • No more items.
                          Working...