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The adoption of lithium iron phosphate batteries (LiFePO4) for solar energy storage is experiencing exceptional growth in Belgium. Faced with increasing energy needs or the desire to optimize self-consumption, many owners of photovoltaic installations wish to increase the capacity of their existing battery parks. While adding new batteries seems a simple and economical solution, this operation carries significant technical risks that require meticulous preparation.
This technical article explains why a prior balancing of all batteries is an absolutely non-negotiable step and proposes a practical field method, accessible to any knowledgeable installer or user, to carry out this operation safely without expensive laboratory equipment.
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Integrating a new battery into a park that has already accumulated usage cycles involves coupling elements with fundamentally different electrochemical and electronic characteristics. This difference is not trivial and deserves a thorough understanding.
Over time and charge-discharge cycles, any lithium battery ages inexorably, even though LiFePO4 technology has an excellent lifespan compared to other lithium chemistries:
Directly connecting a new battery to an older park creates a major electrical imbalance. At the moment of parallel connection, if the states of charge (State of Charge - SOC) are not rigorously identical, an unavoidable physical phenomenon occurs:
A current of very high intensity will flow uncontrollably from the pack with the highest voltage to the one with the lowest voltage, creating electrical and thermal stress potentially destructive.
This equalization current can:
LiFePO4 lithium batteries with advanced BMS for photovoltaic installations
The Battery Management System (BMS) is the electronic brain of the battery park. It ensures protection against overcharging, deep discharges, short circuits, and manages cell balancing. However, the majority of BMSs available on the consumer and professional market use a "passive" balancing technology, whose limitations are often unknown or underestimated.
Passive balancing works on a simple but limited principle: when a cell reaches a voltage higher than the others during charging, the BMS activates a parallel resistor that dissipates the excess energy as heat. This method presents two major technical constraints that make it totally unsuitable for initial balancing between new and old batteries.
These technical limitations demonstrate that it is totally illusory to rely on a passive BMS to harmonize a heterogeneous battery park composed of new and old elements. Balancing must be carried out manually before any extended park is put into service.
Modern photovoltaic roofs require high-performance storage systems. <a href="https://www.wattuneed.com/fr/content/218-boites-a-outils-explorez-nos-ressources-utiles" style="background: #28a745; color: white; padding: 4px 12px; border-radius: 15px; text-decoration: none; font-size
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