Battery Safety: What is a Current Interrupt Device (CID)? (18650, 21700, vent)

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  • Опубликовано: 28 авг 2024

Комментарии • 55

  • @indieelectroworks
    @indieelectroworks 2 года назад +6

    Your content on youtube is golden and you seem to be well educated on the topic! I would really enjoy like to see you cover more topics on li-ion batteries or on pack design safety precautions (for example case studies on existing designs by certain manufacturers).

    • @meandthebattery9628
      @meandthebattery9628  2 года назад

      Thanks for watching and your feedback! I'll keep it in mind and see if I can get to it in the future.

    • @mrschnider6521
      @mrschnider6521 3 месяца назад

      i cant hear what he is saying.

  • @michaelhughes7668
    @michaelhughes7668 16 дней назад

    Great! More, please!

  • @FredMiller
    @FredMiller 2 месяца назад

    Nicely explained!

  • @poccodroid9464
    @poccodroid9464 Год назад +1

    Superb and most needed to be acknowledged containt...!! Rightly said that there are numerous videos showing revival of such batteries those have become unchargable due to overcharging induced gas formation leading to disruption of cap contect. This kind of videos should always be made awailable with all languages support like few movies, as Manny unfortunate, poorly literate users or utubers , then will have advantage of your knowledge sharing...Thanks a ton friend.

    • @meandthebattery9628
      @meandthebattery9628  11 месяцев назад

      Thanks for watching and your feedback! Very much appreciated!

  • @madcow3417
    @madcow3417 11 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks for the info! I have a fully charged battery that I accidentally shorted. I fixed the short, but the the CID tripped. I don't trust this cell for use since you said the pressure went way up meaning something weird happened to the chemistry. None of the reset videos talk much about what actually happens in the battery, just where to stick a screwdriver. I'm going to try to reset the CID (outdoors, with PPE on) so I can discharge it for safer recycling.

    • @meandthebattery9628
      @meandthebattery9628  10 месяцев назад

      Thanks for watching and your feedback! Please be careful with that. You can dispose the cell also without the reset and discharge.

  • @carldurrett4364
    @carldurrett4364 2 года назад +2

    Thanks for all of the story with out your info a lot of people could be in harms way

  • @gamunujayasinghe3829
    @gamunujayasinghe3829 2 года назад +1

    Very informative video .
    Sir , thank you so much for shearing your knowledge .
    I am from Sri Lanka .

  • @pratikdesai8355
    @pratikdesai8355 4 месяца назад

    Great video. But given the last statement about the dangers of trying to re-establish continuity of an activated CID, I feel like that should be in the opening statement and video title. Slightly off emphasis aside, great video nonetheless, thanks for making it.

  • @noneyour2461
    @noneyour2461 2 года назад

    Thanks for the rest of the story, the important part!

  • @bro7269
    @bro7269 Год назад +1

    I've been safety testing cylindrical lithium ion cells for some time. I just want to add my 2 cents. While the safety mechanisms are there to prevent thermal runaway, there is no guarantee that they do. I've overcharged cells that have had both the CID open and have vented but still go into TR. The threat is still there. Having one cell in the middle of a pack with already elevated temperature is the worst situation. The surrounding cells will prevent the suspect cell from cooling and increasing the risk of TR. In our systems we are counting on the charger system, mechanical system and monitoring systems to prevent these things but we still have returns from the field because this. It pains me to see people building power walls in their homes because I know it only takes one cell in a batch 3000-4000 to turn the house into a smoldering mess. Chinese manufacturing is still suspect. Please be careful and understand all the safety issues surrounding these cells. Edit: Watching people pry at the tops of the cells with a screwdriver and/or other conductive tool is just crazy. This can cause the CID to touch the collector thereby reconnecting the current path. Please don't do it....!

    • @meandthebattery9628
      @meandthebattery9628  10 месяцев назад

      Thanks for watching and your comment! I fully agree. Even if the likelihood with cells from quality brands is small, there is always a remaining risk that a single cell is faulty or develops a fault over lifetime.

  • @ShivamVerma786
    @ShivamVerma786 Год назад

    Thank you, For sharing knowledge on such an important topic.

  • @x0mmexx0mmex69
    @x0mmexx0mmex69 5 месяцев назад

    Wow, thanks, now i know how to revieve my batteries ❤

  • @norwayblackmetal1
    @norwayblackmetal1 8 месяцев назад

    Very educational

  • @gabrielconstantine7384
    @gabrielconstantine7384 7 месяцев назад

    I reset one dead 18650 the other day. It came to life showing 2.60 volts. Charged it normally, it remained cool throughout the charge and is now still holding at 4.11 volts. Seems good.

  • @thedogxy
    @thedogxy 11 месяцев назад

    This is very good, thank you.

  • @usturakemal7
    @usturakemal7 Год назад

    well prepared and quite informative video. congrats.

  • @portalkeeper978
    @portalkeeper978 4 месяца назад

    I need some help if you don’t mind sharing some of your knowledge. I bought some battery pack modules each with a BMS. The modules came from factory robots. I have not even opened the shipping box to measure voltages of these modules. The modules have lg m50lt lithium ion cells. I was taking a look at the data sheets online and could not find information on how to properly store them for greater than 2 years. I have been storing them in their shipping box for a little over one year now, but I’m not entirely sure if I need to discharge and then charge them once in a while. Would you be able to give me some instruction on how to preserve these cells? Thank you very much for your time and information.

  • @abhimanyugoyal5659
    @abhimanyugoyal5659 2 года назад

    very nice. i dont find these details anywhere else other than research papers.

    • @meandthebattery9628
      @meandthebattery9628  2 года назад

      Thanks for watching and your nice feedback. Very much appreciated!

    • @abhimanyugoyal5659
      @abhimanyugoyal5659 2 года назад

      Moses I am going to send these videos to atleast 20 colleagues who are working in selecting battery for our EV fleet. Thank you.

  • @kundeleczek1
    @kundeleczek1 Год назад

    Activating CID is crazy crazy idea.

  • @changxianghe2459
    @changxianghe2459 2 года назад +2

    So nice to see these videos! Very clear introduction. Thank you very much!

  • @balaurpopescu
    @balaurpopescu День назад

    I did CID until acid came out of the battery and then I tried to burn the acid to make an explosion, nothing. Then I tried to put it in water, still nothing...

  • @guyshtienberg1259
    @guyshtienberg1259 3 года назад

    Very clear and informative, thank you

  • @tejeshav7949
    @tejeshav7949 2 года назад

    Amazing work. Appreciate it.

  • @janus911rsr
    @janus911rsr 2 года назад +1

    Hi Moses,
    Great video. Can you imagine having a battery without CID? Especially in tables cylindrical cells I have trouble imagine how to put CID into that.
    What do you think?

    • @meandthebattery9628
      @meandthebattery9628  2 года назад +1

      Thanks for watching and your question! Yes, there are cells without CID. That saves some volume in the cell, but you need to make sure on system level, that the battery stays safe. But also in such cells, a vent is typically still present.

  • @chingmakjank9962
    @chingmakjank9962 3 года назад +1

    Sir I feel some hessss sound when I pearce the top, is it a toxic u are talking bout?

    • @meandthebattery9628
      @meandthebattery9628  3 года назад +2

      If you mean piercing the top of a Li-ion cell, yes. The gasses contain toxic components!

  • @keenowl1410
    @keenowl1410 Год назад

    Hi. Thank you so much for your video. I had the same questions you answered. I tried very delicately to pry the nickel tabs off of the negative side of the battery. And no matter what method I seemed to use, being as gentle as I could possibly be, I always seemed to leave a tiny pin size hole on the flat negative bottom side of the battery. Hearing a quick hiss and a sweet smell. I stopped trying to remove nickel tabs from the negative side and just cut them down as close as I can. But I always wondered about that quick hiss and sweet smell. Is it you opinion that this was part of the CID protection or electrolyte or lithium or something else? I always see people man handling these when prying off these nickel tabs with plyers screwdriver etc. And wonder how many have had the same experience and just ignored it. Thank you so much for your time and thoughts.

    • @meandthebattery9628
      @meandthebattery9628  10 месяцев назад

      Thanks for watching and your question, and apologies for my delayed response!
      The CID is located underneath the positive terminal. The negative terminal is on a thin steel wall. If you have a good welding connection, the cell wall is the weakest point and it rips a small hole in the cell can. The hiss is the internal pressure that forms inside the cell and escapes through the small hole. The sweet smell is the electrolyte vapor that is also harmful to breathe in.
      In any case, the cell is damaged afterwards and should not be used anymore!

    • @dinowars0078
      @dinowars0078 26 дней назад

      @@meandthebattery9628 Hello, i was wondering though, i did reset the cid of a cell, and it voltage was about 2.75v close to that, there was a hiss, but no smell no electrolyte escaped no nothing, charged it back and it seems good it holds it charge, did a capacity test and measured around 1648mah for a cell that was supposed to be 2200mah, so i suppoose it still in some ways good?, as long as it doesn,t overheat and i don't over chartge it it technically should still remain safe in someme sort of ways? just that it not the safest? Thanks!

  • @dilipdas5777
    @dilipdas5777 2 года назад

    My lithium battery has sometimes no output current during operation but when I shake the battery it's giving current. Is it CID fault

    • @meandthebattery9628
      @meandthebattery9628  2 года назад +1

      Hi, thanks for watching and the question. I can't imagine that it is the CID. I would bet on a bad contact somewhere in the assembly but to tell for sure, it would require a detailed analysis.

  • @manjulabw
    @manjulabw 2 года назад

    is it safe push back the pin and power up battery again.

    • @meandthebattery9628
      @meandthebattery9628  2 года назад

      Thanks for watching and your question. No, it is not safe!!!

  • @Peter_A1466
    @Peter_A1466 2 года назад

    I just replaced the 18650 cell in a powerbank. The powerbank circuit board and other contacts were nearly pristine, but I noticed the top cap of the cell is corroded. Is this an indication that it most likely vented?

    • @meandthebattery9628
      @meandthebattery9628  2 года назад

      Thanks for watching and your question (and sorry for my late response). Venting usually occurs together with high temperatures, so you would definitely see some impact on the other components. My guess would be, that there either was some electrolyte leakage or some water that caused the corrosion.

  • @jamesrossman5054
    @jamesrossman5054 9 месяцев назад

    Asking permission to use your videos for my educational videos in concerns to changes to the 2026 National Electrical Code? All my videos are nonprofit for educational purposes. Jacob Riddle Edu.

  • @x0mmexx0mmex69
    @x0mmexx0mmex69 5 месяцев назад

    Wow, thanks, now i know how to revieve my batteries ❤