16.2V capacitor pack (if charged to the edge, I prefer 6x2.5V=15V).
I've implemented a 5.8F/140V pack in the past, and we had the manufacturer in house for technical discussions. They stated that, in order to maintain their lifetime, you do not need to derate voltage, and it is much more important to keep the cell temperatures as low as possible. It's like for any other electrolytic capacitor: every 10°C less doubles the lifetime.
cap pack resistance = minim. 1.74 mOhm (6 x 0.29)
Be careful, the datasheet states this as the maximum initial ESR. There will certainly be some spread to lower values, so you need some headroom. The software based overcurrent detection will immediately trip at >= 2kA, and the measurement accuracy is not very high. It depends on production spread of the MOSFETs, the gate drive voltage (which is decreasing during the pulse), and the brass bus bar construction repeatability. Things like mounting torque...
I'm trying to establish with tatus1969 what the lowest workable capacitor type would be, but we first need to have our "math" correct.
At the moment I am busy building up price structure and stock, but I've already set one of the next tasks to investigate this: how should a power capacitor look like that
- delivers enough energy to the load in a short enough time
- stays within given voltage limits during this
- has the lowest possible price to achieve the above
It is not only a matter of ESR, you need to juggle between that and the voltage span. At higher voltages, you can allow more ESR.
Some numbers are already there for my welder:
- max input voltage: 30 V
- min input voltage for welding: 12 V
- min input voltage to keep microcontroller from power cycling: 4 V
- resistance of power switch, cabling and electrodes: approx 2.5 mOhm (can be reduced to <<1mOhm by using more material)
- resistance of weld spot: approx 1 - 4 mOhm
At the end, it is also preferable to have balancing or over-voltage protection for the caps.
As we don't need to be energy efficient, I am thinking of a passive solution with beefy equalization resistors. Their current must exceed the maximum required equalization current, and can be calculated from capacitance spread and leakage current. Of course that doesn't work as overvoltage protection.