|
Adapters, Chargers for Laptops
A battery charger is a device used to put energy into a cell or (rechargeable) battery by forcing an electric current through it. more...
Home
Apple, Macintosh Computers
Desktop & Laptop Accessories
Adapters, Chargers for...
AC, Standard
Compaq
Dell
Gateway
HP
IBM
NEC
Other Brands
Sony
Toshiba
Universal
Car, Auto
Dell
HP, Compaq
IBM
Other
Toshiba
Universal
Barcode Scanners
Batteries for Laptops
Cables, Adapter Cards
Cables, Connectors for...
Card Readers
Cases, Bags for Laptops
Docking Stations for Laptops
Gamepads, Joypads
Headphones, Headsets
Hubs
Infrared, IrDA
Joysticks
Keyboards
Laptop Memory Card Readers
LED Lites
Mice, Mouse
Microphones
Mounts, Auto Mounts
Other Accessories
PC Case, Tower for...
PC Remote Controls
PCMCIA Cards for Laptops
Power Supplies for...
Repair, Service Manuals
Security for Laptops
Speakers
Tablets
Trackballs
Video & Multimedia...
Video Conferencing
Webcams
Wholesale Lots
Desktop & Laptop Components
Desktop PCs
Drives, Controllers &...
Laptops, Notebooks
Monitors & Projectors
The charge current depends upon the technology and capacity of the battery being charged. For example, the current that should be applied to recharge a 12 V car battery will be very different to the current for a mobile phone battery.
Types of battery chargers
Simple
A simple charger works by connecting a constant DC power source to the battery being charged. The simple charger does not alter its output based on time or the charge on the battery. This simplicity means that a simple charger is inexpensive, but there is a tradeoff in quality. Typically, a simple charger takes longer to charge a battery to prevent severe over-charging. Even so, a battery left in a simple charger for too long will be weakened or destroyed due to over-charging.
Trickle
-
A trickle charger is a kind of simple charger that charges the battery slowly, at the self-discharge rate. A trickle charger is the slowest kind of battery charger. A battery can be left in a trickle charger indefinitely. Leaving a battery in a trickle charger keeps the battery "topped up" but never over-charges.
Timer-based
The output of a timer charger is terminated after a pre-determined time. Timer chargers were the most common type for high-capacity Ni-Cd cells in the late 1990s for example (low-capacity consumer Ni-Cd cells were typically charged with a simple charger).
Often a timer charger and set of batteries could be bought as a bundle and the charger time was set to suit those batteries. If batteries of lower capacity were charged then they would be overcharged, and if batteries of higher capacity were charged they would be only partly charged. With the trend for battery technology to increase capacity year on year, an old timer charger would only partly charge the newer batteries.
Timer based chargers also had the drawback that charging batteries that were not fully discharged, even if those batteries were of the correct capacity for the particular timed charger, would result in over-charging.
Intelligent
Output current depends upon the battery's state. An intelligent charger may monitor the battery's voltage, temperature and/or time under charge to determine the optimum charge current at that instant. Charging is terminated when a combination of the voltage, temperature and/or time indicates that the battery is fully charged.
Read more at Wikipedia.org
|
|