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Why Does the Voltage of a LiFePO4 Battery Drop After Disconnecting the Charger?
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Why Does the Voltage of a LiFePO4 Battery Drop After Disconnecting the Charger?

2025-12-10

When a Lithium Iron Phosphate (LiFePO4) battery is fully charged and disconnected from the charger, its voltage naturally decreases from the charging cutoff voltage (approx. 3.65V) to a stable resting value (approx. 3.4V). This is a normal phenomenon, not a sign of battery failure. The primary reason for this voltage drop is the dissipation of polarization effects. During charging, two main types of polarization occur inside the battery:

  1. Electrochemical Polarization:​ The chemical reaction rate at the electrodes can't keep up with the fast flow of electrons, causing charge to build up at the electrode interfaces and creating an additional voltage difference.
  2. Concentration Polarization:​ A concentration gradient of lithium ions (Li⁺) forms, especially near the negative electrode surface where Li⁺ concentration becomes high during charging. Once charging stops, these polarization effects quickly fade. Lithium ions diffuse from high-concentration areas to low-concentration areas, causing the voltage to relax back towards the stable Open-Circuit Voltage (OCV).

 

 

Another key factor is the reversible migration of lithium ions and electrode relaxation. Charging a LiFePO4 battery involves Li⁺ moving from the positive electrode (LiFePO₄) to the negative electrode (typically graphite). After disconnection, the crystal structure of the electrode materials needs time to stabilize, and excess Li⁺ on the electrode surface migrate inward. This process causes a noticeable voltage drop. The unique olivine structure of LiFePO4 makes this ion migration relatively slow, resulting in a characteristic voltage drop pattern: a rapid decrease within the first few minutes, followed by a slow stabilization over several hours. Other contributing factors include:

  • Internal Resistance:​ The voltage drop across the battery's internal resistance disappears instantly when charging stops, causing a small, immediate voltage drop.
  • Surface Charge Dissipation:​ The temporary double layer formed by adsorbed Li⁺ on the electrode surfaces gradually dissipates after charging ceases, reducing the surface charge and further lowering the voltage.
  • Minor Self-Discharge:​ Even at rest, very slow internal chemical reactions cause a gradual loss of charge, leading to a slight long-term voltage decrease.

Typical Voltage Behavior: 

  • Charging Cutoff Voltage:​ ~3.65V (when charger stops)
  • Immediately After Disconnection:​ Drops to ~3.55V (rapid polarization dissipation)
  • After 1 Hour Rest:​ Drops to ~3.45V (stabilization begins)
  • After 24 Hours Rest:​ Stabilizes at ~3.4V (stable OCV) The nominal voltage of LiFePO4 batteries is 3.2V. The total drop of ~0.2-0.25V is a normal characteristic.

Comparison with NMC (Lithium Nickel Manganese Cobalt Oxide) Batteries: This voltage drop is more noticeable in LiFePO4 batteries for two reasons:

  1. The gap between its charging voltage (3.65V) and nominal voltage (3.2V) is larger.
  2. LiFePO4 has an extremely flat discharge voltage plateau (voltage stays almost constant between 20%-90% State of Charge), making the post-charge voltage drop appear more prominent compared to the sloping curve of NMC batteries.

In summary, the voltage drop in a fully charged LiFePO4 battery is a natural result of the dissipation of polarization effects, lithium ion migration, internal resistance, surface charge effects, and minor self-discharge. It is an inherent electrochemical characteristic, not an indicator of degradation. Practical Tip:​ For an accurate measurement of the battery's State of Charge (SOC), let the battery rest for 1-2 hours after charging finishes before measuring the voltage. This allows the voltage to stabilize and better reflect the true SOC.