Hi.
Quote:
I just did some checking and the voltage of the EEE battery is 7.5V vs 11.1V for the Smartbook giving, in both cases, enough of a voltage difference to charge the battery.
No, not really. You can see the voltage difference on the Asus EEE is the 12V from the charger minus the 7.5V from the battery. This gives a 4.5V difference. This is required to overcome the voltage of the battery while in rest, which can be higher than 7.5V.
This same reasoning holds true for the smartbook: 0.9V voltage difference between battery and charger is not enough.
For example, let's imagine a lithium-ion battery consisting of a single cell. This cell has a nominal voltage of 3.7V (The netbook is a 3-cell battery, making 11.1V). However, the maximum charge the cell can hold is 4.2V per cell, giving 12.6V max charge.
Charging a lithium-ion battery is done by using a current source, rather than a normal voltage source. This means that for charging, a current is generated and kept constant until the the 4.2V per cell is attained, after which a constant voltage is applied until the current reaches zero.
A typical charging circuit for a single cell battery consists of for instance a LP2951 IC which does exactly that. The input voltage at the IC ranges between 6 to 10 Volts DC to charge a single 3.7V cell.
I think you can get away with operating the Netbook at 12V, but only when the battery is not connected. I don't have a variable DC power supply at hand to test this; but will try to run some tests after the weekend.
Johan.
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Johan Dams, Genesi USA Inc.
Director, Software Engineering
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