IEEE 1725-2011
$89.38
IEEE Standard for Rechargeable Batteries for Cellular Telephones
Published By | Publication Date | Number of Pages |
IEEE | 2011 | 91 |
Revision Standard – Active. Criteria for design analysis for qualification, quality, and reliability of rechargeable lithium ion and lithium ion polymer batteries for cellular telephone applications are established. Also included are: battery pack electrical and mechanical construction, packaging technologies, pack and cell level charge and discharge controls, and overall system considerations.
PDF Catalog
PDF Pages | PDF Title |
---|---|
1 | IEEE Std 1725-2011 Front cover |
3 | Title page |
6 | Introduction |
7 | Notice to users Laws and regulations |
8 | Copyrights Updating of IEEE documents Errata Interpretations Patents |
9 | Participants |
12 | Contents |
15 | Important notice 1. Overview 1.1 Scope 1.2 Purpose 1.3 Introduction |
16 | 2. Normative references |
17 | 3. Definitions |
20 | 3.1 Special terms 4. System integration considerations 4.1 Introduction |
22 | 4.2 Subsystem requirements 4.3 Additional subsystem standards 5. Cell considerations 5.1 Introduction |
23 | 5.2 Design process |
28 | 5.3 General manufacturing considerations |
30 | 5.4 Cell core assembly |
31 | 5.5 Assembly precautions |
33 | 5.6 Critical testing practices |
35 | 6. Battery pack considerations 6.1 Introduction 6.2 Marking the battery pack |
36 | 6.3 Battery pack considerations |
37 | 6.4 External short-circuit considerations 6.5 Thermal protection |
38 | 6.6 Overcharge considerations |
39 | 6.7 Overdischarge considerations 6.8 Overcurrent considerations 6.9 Mechanical considerations |
41 | 6.10 Connector/terminal considerations 6.11 Assembly considerations |
42 | 6.12 Pack component care |
43 | 6.13 Considerations for cells connected in parallel to form a battery pack 6.14 Critical testing practices |
45 | 7. Host device considerations 7.1 Introduction |
46 | 7.2 DC input voltage and current to the host device |
47 | 7.3 Charging subsystem considerations |
48 | 7.4 Multi-pack systems |
49 | 7.5 Electrostatic discharge 7.6 Temperature specification 7.7 Battery pack qualification 7.8 Electrical and mechanical connections between host and battery |
51 | 7.9 Critical testing practices 8. Adapter considerations 8.1 Introduction 8.2 Adapter requirements |
54 | 8.3 Charger considerations ac/dc charger, dc/dc charger (provides charge control directly to battery) 8.4 Critical testing practices 9. Total system reliability considerations 9.1 Introduction |
55 | 9.2 User interactions and responsibilities |
56 | 9.3 User alerts 9.4 Recommended communication to user 9.5 Marking and labeling 10. System security considerations 10.1 Introduction 10.2 Method of authentication |
57 | 10.3 Purpose of authentication 10.4 Supply chain security |
58 | 11. Validation 11.1 Introduction 11.2 Method |
59 | 11.3 Design requirements 11.4 Quality system requirements 11.5 Process capability and process control requirements |
61 | Annex A (informative) Test methods for design verification |
74 | Annex B (informative) Failure mode and effects analysis techniques B.1 Introduction |
75 | B.2 A typical procedure for design analysis: FMEA |
76 | Annex C (informative) System analysis considering two faults C.1 Why two faults should be considered in a system analysis C.2 Factors that may induce faults in a system |
79 | C.3 Analysis tools for system design |
81 | Annex D (informative) Compliance validation process example D.1 Validation |
82 | D.3 Responsibilities |
83 | D.4 Validation process for system components |
85 | D.5 Validation process for a vendor site |
88 | Annex E (informative) Environmental considerations E.1 Temperature environmental considerations |
90 | Annex F (informative) Bibliography |