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How Does Quick Charge Develop? Version History

  • Contents

Introduction

In the era of smart phones, there are two ways to extend battery life, one is to directly use a large-capacity battery, and another is to use quick charge technology. Using large-capacity batteries is a easy way but with bulky piece of phones. Here let’s talk about the quick charge. How can you make the phone charge faster?

How Does Fast Charging Work?

Catalog

Introduction

Ⅰ Quick Charge Factors

Ⅱ Battery Charging Basics

2.1 Charging Heat

2.2 Charging Power

Ⅲ Quick Charge Development

3.1 USB Battery Charge 1.2

3.2 Qualcomm Quick Charge

3.3 OPPO VOOC Charge

3.4 Pump Express (PE)

3.5 OnePlus Dash Charge

3.6 Huawei SuperCharge

3.7 Low Voltage Solution

3.8 Quick Charge Agreement

Ⅳ FAQ

 

Ⅰ Quick Charge Factors

To realize the quick charging function on the mobile phone, three elements need to be met: Charger, Battery, Charge IC. Adding a point, the charger needs to meet sufficient output current and voltage, because the wiring of the charger has a large parasitic resistance. If requiring a larger charging current, the on-load output voltage of the charger needs to be higher.
Quick charge tech of smartphones is mainly divided into three categories: VOOC flash charge, Qualcomm Quick Charge 2.0, and MediaTek Pump Express Plus.
At present, the mainstream modes of quick charge on the market include three modes
High voltage and constant current
Low voltage and high current
High voltage and high current

fast charging

Figure 1. Fast Charging

Ⅱ Battery Charging Basics

2.1 Charging Heat

How does the battery charge and solve the heat?

Heating Up While Charging

Figure 2. Heating Up While Charging

The basic condition for battery charging is that the charger voltage must be higher than the battery voltage to generate a charging current and complete the charge transfer process. At present, most of the batteries of mobile phones are composed of single lithium or multiple lithium. Generally, the working voltage of mobile phone batteries is about 3.3V~4.2V. During discharge, the voltage will drop, so the average voltage is about 3.7V-3.8V.
When charging, the electric energy enters the mobile phone and is processed by the step-down circuit in the mobile phone, and then outputs a voltage of about 3.3~4.5V to charge the battery. And this voltage drop process is responsible for the charge management IC module in the mobile phone. It is responsible for converting the current output by the power supply into a current through the battery. In this process, there will be a certain loss, which will be transferred out of heat.

2.2 Charging Power

In the case of a certain battery level, power indicates the charging speed, the higher the power, the faster the charging speed.
Power (P) = voltage (V) x current (I)
In theory, increasing the current and voltage can higher the charging power of the battery, but lithium batteries are prone to battery damage or deflagration due to undervoltage or overvoltage. Thus mobile phones must be equipped with a complete power circuit. Among them, the charging control IC and the power control IC are the most important.

 

Ⅲ Quick Charge Development

According to theory, quick charge adjust the input value of the voltage and current, thereby shorten the charging time of the mobile phone. Next, let us take a look at the development history of it.
The charging standard of mobile phones can be traced back to the era of feature phones, which can be started from the charging standard USB BC 1.2 (BC is the abbreviation of Battery Charge).

3.1 USB Battery Charge 1.2

The USB specification was first introduced in 1995. It was developed by USB Implement Forum (USB IF), including Intel, NEC Corporation, Compaq, DEC (American Digital Equipment Corporation), IBM (International Business Machines Corporation), Microsoft, and Northern Telecom.
The USB BC1.2 standard was published by the USB IF in 2010. It refers to the ability to directly charge the battery of a portable device, and has become a key standard for establishing the correct way to charge the battery through the USB port. So BC1.2 is a set of official standards that can use USB interface to charge portable devices like mobile phones (including power-off charging). 
Here you may ask, what is the relationship between the USB specification protocol and fast charging?
The emergence of USB BC 1.2 makes simultaneous charging and data transmission a reality. Although the USB interface was originally used by manufacturers to transfer data and connect devices such as keyboard or mouse instead of charging. Just think, wouldn't it be much more convenient if you can use the USB interface to charge these devices? So USB BC 1.2 came into being. Although the maximum voltage of the USB interface was still 5V at that time, and the maximum current of USB charging is 1.5A. Although it did not increase the voltage (mainly to adapt to other portable devices), but the USB interface can reach 7.5W with 1.5A current. At that time, the USB BC 1.2 is enough to cope with the charging of mobile phones.
The emergence of USB BC 1.2 not only ended the chaotic scenes of USB charging specifications at that time, but it also has good support for hubs/distributors/HUB. So the USB interface data line has become the hot product of various manufacturers for a while. But there is also a data cable with a MicroUSB 2.0 interface (also known as the Android cable). It has only four wires inside, and its current carrying capacity is very limited (2A is the max).
Although the USB BC 1.2 standard was able to meet the charging needs of mobile phones at the time, the development of mobile phones has not stopped. With the time goes by, mobile phones have more and more functions. In order to cope with daily use, the battery capacity has also become larger and larger, and the battery capacity has also exceeded 2000mAh, but with the extension of the charging time. When the cell phone battery capacity reaches 3000mAh or even 4000mAh, does it have to be charged overnight? So the charging speed again meets forward higher requirements.

3.2 Qualcomm Quick Charge

In 2013, it was the chip supplier Qualcomm who discovered this problem. Qualcomm first put forward the concept of "Fast Charge", and Quick Charge 1.0 was born. Improve the charging efficiency by increasing the input current, support 5V/2A, that is, the maximum charging power of 10W, breaking through the 1.5A current upper limit of the USB Battery Charge 1.2. In the same year, Huawei also introduced the "fast charge" concept to the first generation of Mate phones, which also supports 5V/2A input, and can fully charge a 4050mAh battery within 3.5 hours.
In 2014, the situation was a little different. Qualcomm overturned the QC1.0 strategy and adopted a high-voltage quick charging solution.
As mentioned above, P (power) = V (voltage) * I (current), because the data line of MicroUSB 2.0 can only support up to 2A current. Since it couldn’t to increase the current at that time, only adjust the voltage. For example, a fast charge with 18W power, if you want to use a 5V voltage, the current has exceeded 3A. A normal MicroUSB can never withstand such a high current. Using a voltage of 12V, the current only needs 1.5A, so the problems had be solved.
The big advantage of this high-voltage fast charging tech is that the cost is relatively low (no need to buy different data cables), and the disadvantages are also obvious. The voltage of the charger is suddenly increased to twice as much, and the step-down heat is also extremely large for the mobile phone. So a major shortcoming of high-voltage quick charge is that the mobile phone generates serious heat during charging.
This fast charging solution is the high-voltage QC2.0. It is the most popular and influential standard in the history of QC. For example, Samsung’s 2018 flagship Galaxy S9 still uses the QC2.0.

qualcomm quick charge

Figure 3. Qualcomm Quick Charge

QC2.0 has improved the charging voltage from the conventional 5V that has been maintained for many years to 9V/12V/20V. It achieves 18W high-power power transmission at the same 2A current as QC1.0, and does not require special wires.
QC2.0 has far-reaching influence because of its powerful compatibility. At that time, Micro USB was the standard configuration of smart phones, but it was restricted by the physical interface. Once the current exceeds 2A, it is prone to damage. The smart part of QC2.0 bypasses the restrictions of the Micro USB interface and the data cable, and only increases the charging speed by directly adjusting the input voltage. What’s more, QC2.0 quick charge tech has given peers a idea for reference.

3.3 OPPO VOOC Charge

For example, OPPO introduced VOOC (Voltage Open Loop Multi-step Constant-Current Charging). What OPPO uses here is another solution. There is a fact that normal MicroUSB data cable can't carry such a large current. Because the usual MicroUSB data cable has only five measuring points and four wires, so just increase their number. Therefore, the original VOOC charging head is extremely big because of integrates IC circuit.
In addition, because the circuit is rebuilt, you can only use the official special data cable, and the ordinary MicroUSB data cable cannot achieve the fast charging effect. The shortcoming is obvious that the cost is high. But the biggest problem is that high-current charging has more damages. For example, it has been shortening the battery service life of many mobile phones because of VOOC quick charge a year later.
Following the principle of "equivalent exchange", since such a heavy price has been paid, there will certainly be generous returns. The advantage of the first-generation VOOC fast charge is that with the 5V/5A 25W ultra-high power, OPPO mobile phones equipped with VOOC fast charge are extremely fast in charging speed. And it puts the heat source into the charger externally, and the heat generated by the mobile phone during charging is significantly less than that of the high-voltage fast charging solution. As a result, the high-voltage fast charging solution led by Qualcomm QC and the low-voltage and high-current fast charging solution led by OPPO VOOC have parted ways.

Version

Launch Time

Voltage/Current

Description

VOOC 2.0

2015

5V/4A

Same as the first version

VOOC 3.0

2019

5V/5A

Charge the phone up to 55% in 30 minutes

VOOC 4.0

2020

10V/5A(50W)

Charge the phone up to 67% in 30 minutes

SuperVOOC

2018

5V/6A (30W)

Charge a two-cell battery in series

SuperVOOC 2.0

2020

10V/6.5A (65W)

Successor of Super VOOC with GaN technology

The key to fast charging of mobile phones is the small micro USB interface. At this time, USB type-C appears. Simply list its advantages, such as: support positive and negative plug compatibility, compatible with USB 3.1 standards, support 10Gbit/s transmission in maximum, support the USB Power Delivery charging protocol, support 5A current, the maximum can provide 100W of power. Therefore, the Type-C interface is inherently friendly to large currents.
Qualcomm is a giant in mobile phone chips and communications patents, and by virtue of its dominant position, it can quickly popularize its fast charging standards to gain the standard license fee. However, various manufacturers have also begun to develop their own fast charging standards to share this big cake.

3.4 Pump Express (PE)

Also in 2014, MediaTek launched its own Pump Express (PE) quick charge tech, and Meizu's mCharge fast charging is based on this, and the later Pump Express Plus (PEP) fast charging. Huawei launched the Fast Charge Protocol (FSP) in the early days. As for Xiaomi and Nubia, many manufacturers that still use Qualcomm QC for their flagship mobile phones. They belong to high-voltage fast charging scheme.

3.5 OnePlus Dash Charge

Next, let’s talk about OnePlus. Although OnePlus uses Qualcomm’s SoC, but chose a low-voltage and high-current charging solution, that is, Dash charge. It first debuted with the launch of OnePlus 3, where OnePlus promised 60% of full charge in just 30 minutes of charging.
Seeing this, do you think that Qualcomm's high-voltage fast charging solution has won the victory, while the low-voltage solution can survive hardly?
Of course not, the turning point is that more and more mobile phones are equipped with USB Type-C interface. By 2016, it has become popular. For example, Android flagship phones basically use this interface.

3.6 Huawei SuperCharge

In the same year, Huawei improved its FastCharge (FCP) to SuperCharge (SCP). SCP can be said to be one of the fastest/good compatible fast charging representatives in the world, and is compatible with PD and Qualcomm QC protocols.

3.7 Low Voltage Solution

MediaTek has also switched to a low-voltage solution. Pump Express technology has developed to 3.0. Pump Express 3.0 is the world's first fast charging solution that uses Type-C interface for direct charging. This solution can effectively prevent the phone from getting hot during charging. In a word, it is very safe.
In 2017, Meizu released Super mCharge quick charge tech. It has a charging power of up to 55W at 11V/5A. Unfortunately, due to the inability to get mass production, this 55w super fast charge is still not applied to mobile phones, and replaced by MCharge4.0 fast charging technology. The earlier mCharge3.0 is a high-voltage fast charging solution (24W), and its charger output voltage can reach up to 12V; while mCharge4.0 (25W) belongs to low-voltage and high-current solution, with 5V output voltage and 5A current.
Qualcomm began to discover the advantages of the low-voltage solution, so it uses the low voltage and high current solution in the QC4.0 fast charging protocol. Of course, it also supports high voltage fast charging at the same time.
Although low-voltage and high-current solutions have basically ruled fast charging, the fast charging protocols of various companies are not compatible with each other. That is to say, although they all use Type-C, they must use the fast charging function of mobile phones corresponding to their own agreement. In other words, although they are all Type-C interfaces, the fast charge protocol is different.

3.8 Quick Charge Standard

Fortunately, the USB IF has unified the fast charging standard. Mobile phones should employ fast charge according to the USB PD protocol. Adjust voltage and current. This standard is also supported by Google. However, various manufacturers make their own mobile phones, and use their own fast charging protocols. So the USB PD protocol has been put aside.
The main reasons why mobile phone manufacturers have become more obsessed with constant voltage and high current over the years are: greater power and less charging heat. The USB PD3.0 has successfully incorporated Qualcomm's QC4 protocol. So far, USB PD3.0 has been the regular rule. In short, manufacturers who want to continue to develop their own charging technology, they only need to be based on the USB PD protocol. Moreover, the latest 100W fast charge has been successfully tested. Although large-scale commercial use is unlikely right now, the technical bottleneck will always be overcome.

Every Fast Charging Standard Explained

 

Ⅳ FAQ

1. What is considered quick charge?
For fast charging, you're looking at something that bumps the voltage up 5V, 9V, 12V, and beyond, or increases amperage to 3A and above. Keep in mind, your device will only take in as much power as its charging circuit is designed for.

2. Does Quick Charge work with any cable?
Do I need any specific equipment for fast charge? Fast charge requires 3 components – a compatible phone/tablet/laptop or other device, a charger that supports USB Fast charge, and a compatible cable. The cable will have USB-C at least on the charger end, and either USB-C or Apple Lightning on the device end.

3. Is fast charging bad?
The bottom line is, fast charging won't impact your battery life substantially. But the physics behind the technology means you shouldn't expect the battery to last longer than using a conventional “slow” charging brick.

4. What phones use quick charge?
Apple, Samsung, Google, OnePlus, LG, Sony, Motorola, Huawei, Xiaomi, OPPO, ViVo and Realme.

5. What is the meaning of VOOC?
The OPPO VOOC (Voltage Open Loop Multi-step Constant-Current Charging) Flash Charging system is a proprietary rapid-charge technology created by OPPO Electronics, which, at present, is able to charge certain OPPO devices from 0 to 75% in just 30 minutes.

6. Which phones support VOOC?
Realme Narzo 20 Pro (65W Dart Charging)
Realme 7 (30W Dart Charging)
Realme 7i (18W)
Realme 6 (30W VOOC fast charging)
Realme X2 (30W VOOC fast charging)

7. What is difference between Dash and Warp Charge?
The key difference in the two standards is the increase in wattage on the Warp Charge standard. ... In comparison, Dash Charge uses a 5V / 4A (20W) configuration, and both require dedicated Warp Charge / Dash Charge compatible cables to carry the energy.

8. Can you use Dash charge with other phones?
Dash charge won't harm the phone.. Yes it can. I don't think OnePlus' type C cables or charger are up to USB Type C specifications. I would advise to not do it and get the proper cables and charger for your other device.

9. How fast is Huawei SuperCharge?
46 mAh per minute
An infographic put together by Hometop shows that Huawei Super Charge is the fastest at over 46 mAh per minute.

10. What is MediaTek Pump Express?
Pump Express 4.0 is the latest advance in MediaTek's family of charging innovations. This next-generation charging technology will change your (battery) life, cutting smartphone battery recharge times by over half, compared to a standard USB charger.

11. What is MediaTek Pump Express 2.0?
They use the MediaTek Pump Express 2.0 fast charging technology and reach a 35% (1,785mAh) in just 30 minutes giving several hours use. It can fully charge the huge battery via its USB-C connector from 0-100% to give 2 full days use in just 2.5 hrs.

12. What is super flash charge?
The company introduced its 65W SuperVOOC charging that can charge 4000mAh battery on the Reno Ace / Ace2 fully in about 30 minutes. ... The company's 125W fast charging is rumoured to charge the phone's battery from 0 to 100% in about 10 minutes.

13. What is DART charge Realme?
The Realme 30W Dart Charge Power Bank is an easy recommendation from our side for anyone who owns a compatible device. It comes with two-way fast charging and support for multiple quick charge protocol support. The power bank is also compatible with multiple smartphones apart from Realme.

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