Abstract

The demand for high energy density in lithium-ion battery packs for electric vehicles poses a challenge to maintaining its optimum operating temperature while reducing the risk of thermal runaway (TR) propagation. This study proposes a novel hybrid TR propagation mitigation system that balances heat transfer and thermal insulation requirements using low and high thermal conductivity phase change materials (PCM), heat pipes (HP), and air-cooling. The design and optimization of such a mitigation system are complex due to the many design parameters involved. The Adaptive-Kriging-High dimensional model representation (Adaptive-Kriging-HDMR) is used to establish a surrogate model of the system, and the sensitivity of the system's design parameters is evaluated with the maximum battery temperature and the system weight as the targets, thereby improving the efficiency of model calculation and reducing the dimension of optimization parameters. Then, the design of the sensitive parameters is optimized using an extended elitist non‐dominated sorting genetic algorithm (E-NSGA-II) multi-objective optimization algorithm. The results show that the modeling difficulty and optimization calculation time are significantly reduced by using a surrogate model. The calculation time for a single surrogate model only takes a few seconds instead of several hours for the original three-dimensional heat transfer and flow calculation. The thermal conductivity of high thermal conductivity-PCM, the distance between battery and low thermal conductivity-PCM, the battery spacing, and the HP length significantly affect the system. The optimized system substantially reduces the overall weight of the battery system while ensuring its good heat dissipation capability. In the case of TR in a single battery, the system succeeds in limiting the TR propagation to the same row, with the maximum battery temperature in the second row being only 64.3 °C, well below the battery TR trigger point. Under more severe conditions, such as TR occurring in two batteries simultaneously, the maximum battery temperature in the second row is 155.5 °C, and no TR spreads to the adjacent row. This study provides a rapid and effective method for designing a TR propagation mitigation system. It can serve as a reference for the engineering design and optimization of battery thermal management systems.

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