Abstract

Abnormalities in individual lithium-ion batteries can cause the entire battery pack to fail, thereby the operation of electric vehicles is affected and safety accidents even occur in severe cases. Therefore, timely and accurate detection of abnormal monomers can prevent safety accidents and reduce property losses. In this paper, a battery cell anomaly detection method is proposed based on time series decomposition and an improved Manhattan distance algorithm for actual operating data of electric vehicles. First, time series decomposition is performed on the voltage data of all battery cells in the battery pack to obtain the voltage trend component of each cell. Then, the improved Manhattan distance algorithm is utilized to calculate and compare the Manhattan distance values between adjacent cell trend components, to determine the abnormal cells inside the battery pack. Furthermore, the Manhattan distance values at the same sampling moment are calculated within the data sequence to detect the specific time when the abnormal cells malfunction. The data analysis and experimental verification results based on actual vehicle operating conditions indicate that this method can accurately identify an abnormal cell within the battery pack and diagnose the specific moment of abnormality in the battery cell at an early stage of failure, with good robustness.

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