Abstract

The temperature and the temperature gradient within the battery pack of an electric vehicle have a strong effect on the life time of the battery cells. In the case of automotive applications, a battery thermal management (BTM) system is required to maintain the temperature of the cells within a prescribed and safe range, and to prevent excessively high thermal gradients within the battery pack. This work documents the assessment of a thermal management system for a battery pack for an electric van, which adopts a combination of active/passive solutions: the battery cells are arranged in a matrix or composite made of expanded graphite and a phase change material (PCM), which can be actively cooled by forced air convection. The thermal dissipation of the cells was predicted based on an equivalent circuit model of the cells (LG Chem MJ1) that was empirically calibrated in a previous study. It resulted that, in order to keep the temperature of the battery pack at or below 40 °C during certain charge/discharge cycles, a purely passive BTM would require a considerable amount of PCM material that would unacceptably increase the battery pack weight. Therefore, the passive solution was combined with an air cooling system that could be activated when necessary. To assess the resulting hybrid BTM concept, CFD simulations were performed and an experimental test setup was built to validate the simulations. In particular, PCM melting and solidification times, the thermal discrepancy among the cells and the melting/solidification temperatures were examined. The melting time experimentally observed was higher than that predicted by the CFD model, but this discrepancy was not observed during the solidification of the PCM. This deviation between the CFD model results and the experimental data during PCM melting can be attributed to the thermal losses occurring through the mock-up casing as the heating elements are in direct contact with the external walls of the casing. Moreover, the temperature range over which the PCM solidifies was 6 °C lower than that estimated in the numerical simulations. This occurs because the simple thermodynamic model cannot predict the metastable state of the liquid phase which occurs before the onset of PCM solidification. The mockup was also used to emulate the heat dissipation of the cells during a highway driving cycle of the eVan and the thermal management solution as designed. Results showed that for this mission of the vehicle and starting from an initial temperature of the cells of 40 °C, the battery pack temperature could be maintained below 40 °C over the entire mission by a cooling air flow at 2.5 m/s and at a temperature of 30 °C.

Highlights

  • The lifetime of lithium-based battery cells is strongly correlated to the temperature levels to which they are exposed during operation and storage

  • Heat is dissipated in a battery cell both during charging and discharging and its intensity depends on the chemistry of the cells as well as on the rate of this process, which is generally characterized in terms of the so-called C-rate

  • Electric vehicles (EVs) are equipped with battery packs consisting of hundreds or even thousands of battery cells connected in a specific serial-parallel configuration

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Summary

Introduction

The lifetime of lithium-based battery cells is strongly correlated to the temperature levels to which they are exposed during operation and storage. The tests showed that, with the air-cooled battery pack, the cells located in the center of the module reached the upper temperature limit indicated by the manufacturer (i.e., 65 ◦C) under a 1-C discharge rate after approximately 50 min. Based on the results reported in the literature, it is possible to conclude that the adoption of a PCM in the battery pack is not sufficient to maintain cell temperature low enough to preserve their performance and lifetime.

Battery Pack Description and Design Conditions
Modeling of the Hybrid BTM System
Thermal Gradients in the Battery Pack
BTM Assessment for a Reference Driving Cycle of the eVan
Purely Passive Solution
Cooling Air Velocity and Temperature Determination
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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