Battery charger PCBs must handle power conversion efficiently while implementing safety protections that prevent fire, explosion, and battery degradation. Whether you are designing a lithium-ion charger for a portable device, a lead-acid charger for a UPS, or a multi-cell battery management system for an e-bike, the PCB layout directly affects charging efficiency, safety, and battery lifespan. This guide covers charger circuit layout for the most common battery chemistries in Indian electronics products.
Table of Contents
- Battery Chemistries Overview
- Charger IC Layout
- Power Path Design
- Protection Circuit Layout
- BMS Layout for Multi-Cell
- Thermal Management
- Safety Standards
- Frequently Asked Questions
Battery Chemistries Overview
| Chemistry | Nominal Voltage | Charge Voltage | Common Use in India |
|---|---|---|---|
| Li-ion (LCO) | 3.7V | 4.2V | Smartphones, power banks |
| Li-ion (LFP) | 3.2V | 3.65V | Solar batteries, e-rickshaws |
| Li-Po | 3.7V | 4.2V | Drones, wearables |
| Lead-acid | 2.0V/cell | 2.4V/cell | UPS, inverters, automotive |
| NiMH | 1.2V | 1.4-1.5V | Rechargeable AA/AAA |
Charger IC Layout
- Input capacitor: Place 10µF ceramic + 100nF within 3mm of the charger IC input pin. The input path carries pulsed current from the switching converter
- Output (battery) capacitor: Place 10µF ceramic close to the battery connection. This smooths the charging current
- Inductor placement: For switching chargers (TP4056, BQ25895, MP2667), place the inductor adjacent to the switch node with minimal copper area on the switch node (reduces EMI antenna)
- Sense resistor: If using an external current sense resistor, use Kelvin connections. Route sense traces from the resistor pads, not from the power path
- NTC thermistor: Route the NTC trace away from power components. Place the NTC on the battery or adjacent to the battery connector for accurate temperature monitoring
Power Path Design
- Separate the charging path from the load path to prevent voltage drops during simultaneous charge and discharge
- Use power path management ICs (BQ24075, LTC4412) for automatic switching between USB/adapter power and battery
- Size traces for the maximum charging current: 1mm width per 1A on 1oz copper (outer layer, 10°C rise)
- Place reverse polarity protection (P-MOSFET or ideal diode) on the battery connection. Incorrect battery polarity can cause fire
Protection Circuit Layout
Lithium battery protection is non-negotiable — unprotected lithium cells can catch fire or explode:
- Overvoltage protection: Disconnect charging when cell voltage exceeds 4.25V (single cell). Usually integrated in the BMS IC
- Undervoltage protection: Disconnect load when cell drops below 2.5-3.0V to prevent deep discharge damage
- Overcurrent protection: Current limit via MOSFET switches controlled by the protection IC. Place MOSFETs in the battery current path with adequate copper for heat dissipation
- Short circuit protection: Fast response (microsecond level) current cutoff. The protection IC detects overcurrent and turns off the MOSFETs
- Temperature protection: NTC thermistor monitors battery temperature. Disconnect charging above 45°C and discharging above 60°C
BMS Layout for Multi-Cell
Multi-cell battery packs (2S-16S for e-bikes, solar storage) require a Battery Management System (BMS):
- Route cell voltage sense traces as thin, isolated signals — not through the power path. Each sense trace monitors the voltage of one cell
- Place balance resistors (10-100Ω, 1-2W) with adequate thermal clearance. They dissipate heat during cell balancing
- Route the cell interconnects (power connections between cells in series) with wide traces for the pack current
- Place the BMS IC close to the battery connector to minimise sense trace length
- Use TVS protection on all cell sense inputs — battery connection/disconnection can cause voltage spikes
Thermal Management
- Charger ICs dissipate power proportional to (Vin – Vbat) × Icharge for linear chargers (TP4056). Use adequate copper pour for heat dissipation
- Switching chargers are more efficient but the inductor and MOSFET generate heat. Place on copper pour with thermal vias
- For high-current charging (above 2A), consider a separate heatsink or aluminium enclosure contact
- Monitor PCB temperature with an NTC thermistor near the hottest component. Reduce charge current if PCB temperature exceeds 70°C
Safety Standards
Battery charger products sold in India must comply with:
- BIS (IS 16046): Safety requirements for lithium-ion batteries and packs. Mandatory BIS registration for commercial products
- IEC 62133: Safety standard for secondary cells and batteries
- UL 2054: Safety standard for household and commercial batteries (for US market export)
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I use the TP4056 for all lithium charging needs?
The TP4056 is a simple, inexpensive linear charger for single-cell Li-ion/LiPo at up to 1A. It is adequate for low-power projects. For multi-cell, high-current, or USB-C PD charging, use a more capable IC like BQ25895, MP2667, or CN3791.
How do I protect against reverse battery connection?
Place a P-channel MOSFET in the battery positive path, with the gate connected to the battery negative through a resistor. If the battery is reversed, the MOSFET stays off, preventing current flow. Alternatively, use an ideal diode IC (LTC4412) for lower voltage drop.
What BMS should I use for an e-bike battery?
For a 48V e-bike (13S Li-ion), use a dedicated BMS module rated for the pack current (typically 20-40A continuous). Popular options in India: Daly BMS, JBD BMS, or custom designs using BQ76952 IC. The BMS handles cell balancing, protection, and temperature monitoring.
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