Abstract

Batteries stacks are made of cells in certain series-parallel arrangements. Unfortunately, cell performance degrades over time in terms of capacity, internal resistance, or self-discharge rate. In addition, degradation rates are heterogeneous, leading to cell-to-cell variations. Balancing systems can be used to equalize those differences. Dissipative or non-dissipative systems, so-called passive or active balancing, can be used to equalize either voltage at end-of-charge, or state-of-charge (SOC) at all times. While passive balancing is broadly adopted by industry, active balancing has been mostly studied in academia. Beyond that, an emerging research field is multi-functional balancing, i.e., active balancing systems that pursue additional goals on top of SOC equalization, such as equalization of temperature, power capability, degradation rates, or losses minimization. Regardless of their functionality, balancing circuits are based either on centralized or decentralized control systems. Centralized control entails difficult expandability and single point of failure issues, while decentralized control has severe controllability limitations. As a shift in this paradigm, here we present for the first time a distributed multi-objective control algorithm, based on a multi-agent consensus algorithm. We implement and validate the control in simulations, considering an electro-thermal lithium-ion battery model and an electric vehicle model parameterized with experimental data. Our results show that our novel multi-functional balancing can enhance the performance of batteries with substantial cell-to-cell differences under the most demanding operating conditions, i.e., aggressive driving and DC fast charging (2C). Driving times are extended (>10%), charging times are reduced (>20%), maximum cell temperatures are decreased (>10 °C), temperature differences are lowered (~3 °C rms), and the occurrence of low voltage violations during driving is reduced (>5×), minimizing the need for power derating and enhancing the user experience. The algorithm is effective, scalable, flexible, and requires low implementation and tuning effort, resulting in an ideal candidate for industry adoption.

Highlights

  • The 2015 Paris agreement has established global guidelines to tackle climate change, including electrification of transportation [1]

  • A battery electric vehicles (BEVs) or plug-in hybrid electric vehicles (PHEVs) battery is formed of a combination of hundreds to thousands of lithium-ion cells connected in a certain seriesparallel arrangement

  • We compare side-by-side the performance of single-controllers for either SOC, voltage, and temperature balancing, and evaluate the results in comparison with the ‘no control’ case, which is used as a benchmark

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Summary

Introduction

The 2015 Paris agreement has established global guidelines to tackle climate change, including electrification of transportation [1]. Technological improvements, and falling costs, the global fleet of light-duty passenger vehicles (LDPVs) with a higher degree of electrification, such as battery electric vehicles (BEVs) and plug-in hybrid electric vehicles (PHEVs), have expanded from 2014–2019 by an annual average of. Recent studies confirm that the future remains bright for passenger EVs in the following decades, which will gain market share supported by battery cost reductions and technological advances [3]. All EVs in today’s market store electrical energy in batteries, an essential technology to electrify LDPVs in the 20 years [2,3]. EVs with a higher degree of electrification, i.e., BEVs and PHEVs, are equipped with larger batteries that can be directly recharged from the grid, in addition to regenerative braking, a common feature in EVs with lower degrees of electrification. A BEV or PHEV battery is formed of a combination of hundreds to thousands of lithium-ion cells connected in a certain seriesparallel arrangement

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