I was told by Li Ping that the BMS on his batteries will prevent regen braking to protect the battery from the higher than 5a regen current. I assumed that was also correct for the GM LiFePo4 batteries as well.
If you open a GM Lithium battery it has a
BMS with a FET for charging and dual FET for discharge. These FETs have built-in protection diodes against reverse voltages. So during regen the discharge FET will conduct current to the charge FET via this diode. You will get around 0.7 V voltage drop over this diode (unless it is a schottky type which has much less). Then current flow until it exceeds the maximum allowed by the
BMS. When the
BMS senses that the charge current is higher than the limit it will open the charge FET to protect the cells from damage. Then with no load, the voltage generated will increase above the maximum ratings and the magic smoke will start leaking...
To make regen work on Lithium batteries, you need a
BMS that is designed for regen, and use battery cells that is able to handle the maximum regen current. In addition, you should also have a braking resistor as often used on AC variable speed drives. This resistor handles the regenerative load when the battery is full. I am currently designing my own
BMS using the new Texas Instruments bq78PL114
BMS chip where I implement this function. My
BMS is specially designed for regenerative ebikes/velomobiles so it has a built-in regulator for cycle lights as well (fixed voltage or fixed current for LED).
Maybe I can talk GM into producing and selling it (if it works as planned
).