OK, but the voltage drop after charging is generally no more than 50 mV (e.g. from 4.20 down to 4.15) while the "bounce back" I've observed after discharging down to 2.8V at 0.2C is has always been hundreds of mV. With cells that are "new" (have not been cycled except in testing), I'm generally seeing ~200-300 mV, and cells that have seen a lot of use can be double that.
The larger bounce back after a discharge is because of the large difference in the amount of current that is flowing. At the end of charging only 50mA to perhaps 100mA is going into the cell. At the end of the discharge you have a lot more current flowing so the internal resistance causes more voltage sag (Ohm’s Law) and that results in a bigger immediate bounce back. Then you have the much slower settling of the ion distribution to get the cell to its true resting voltage.
That said, I have a hard time with attributing something that takes many minutes to an hour or longer to "Internal resistance".
You’re right, I made an error. My apologies for any the confusion that caused. In my rush I mixed things together I should not have.
The settling to the resting voltage has nothing to do with the regular DC resistance of the materials or the “polarization resistance” (ion flow needing to shift around and set up for a different current flow direction) that causes a voltage change when the current starts or changes directions.
The process for ions settling into the anode or cathode material is called “intercalation” and can take a long time to finish. The larger the current flow was before stopping the longer it takes to settle. It happens faster after charging since the current flow at the end of charging is pretty small.
A large part of the settling happens in a few minutes but for some applications you need to wait for a very long time before reading the cell’s voltage to be able accurately determine how much charge is left in the cell. This is typically for LiFePO4 and other cells with very flat discharge curves. Just a small difference in the voltage can equal a large difference in the amount of charge left in the cell. Millivolts make a difference.
For our “standard” Li-Ion cells it’s less of a concern but millivolts can still matter when around the mid-point of the charge, near 3.6V (resting voltage). It all depends on whether you need to know how full a cell is to one percent or whether just 1/4, 1/2, 3/4, FULL is enough.