Abstract

Large-scale lithium-ion batteries are favored in electric vehicles and energy storage stations; for instance, BYD blade batteries and CATL Kirin batteries are popular. A tiny defect will trigger thermal runaway from a local point towards the other parts of the battery, and the boundary between the failure region and the intact region is called the “thermal runaway front,” of which the dynamics are still unclear. Herein, this paper deduces two formulas for the moving speed (vTR) of the thermal runaway front by applying the principles of energy conservation (Formula I) and flame front (Formula II); formulas for the thermal runaway front velocity (vTR) are derived. The velocity vTR conforms to the 1/2 power of the heat conductivity and reaction rate in both formulas. Data regression for the experimental data demonstrated that the overall estimation error was 10 % using Formula I and 25 % using Formula II. As the zero velocity value indicates the termination of thermal runaway propagation, further derivations reveal that forced cooling can suppress thermal runaway as long as the heat dissipation power is higher than the heat generation power. Sufficient heat dissipation time is achieved by the time delay of heat transfer in the long run of thermal runaway propagation. The formula for the dynamics of thermal runaway propagation universally applies to various large-scale lithium-ion batteries, assisting the safe design of high-energy batteries and providing new insights into suppressing battery thermal runaway by the heat transfer delay effect.

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