Abstract

An efficient thermal management system (TMS) of electric vehicles requires a high-fidelity battery model. The model should be able to predict the electro-thermal behavior of the battery, considering the operating conditions throughout the battery’s lifespan. In addition, the model should be easy to handle for the online monitoring and control of the TMS. Equivalent circuit models (ECMs) are widely used because of their simplicity and suitable performance. In this paper, the electro-thermal behavior of a prismatic 50 Ah LMO/Graphite cell is investigated. A dynamic model is adopted to describe the battery voltage, current, and heat generation. The battery model parameters are identified for a single cell, considering their evolution versus the state of charge and temperature. The needed experimental data are issued from the measurements carried out, thanks to a special custom electrical bench able to impose a predefined current evolution or driving cycles, controllable by serial interface. The proposed battery parameters, functions of state of charge (SOC), and temperature (T) constitute a set of interesting and complete data, not available in the literature, and suitable for further investigations. The thermal behavior and the dynamic models are validated using the New European Driving Cycle (NEDC), with a large operating time, higher than 3 h. The measurement and model prediction exhibit a temperature difference less than 1.2 °C and a voltage deviation less than 3%, showing that the proposed model accurately predicts current, voltage, and temperature. The combined effects of temperature and SOC provides a more efficient modeling of the cell behavior. Nevertheless, the simplified model with only temperature dependency remains acceptable. Hence, the present modeling constitutes a confident prediction and a real step for an online control of the complete thermal management of electrical vehicles.

Highlights

  • The climate warming effect is a great societal and social issue in the word

  • Lithium-ion batteries represent the premium choice of the power source in hybrid electrical vehicles (HEV), plug-in hybrid vehicles (PHEV), and full electrical vehicles (FEV) due to their high energy density, high power density, and low self-discharge rate [2,3,4,5]

  • The main purpose of the work is the thermal analysis of the LMO/Graphite cell in order to contribute to the optimal sizing of the thermal management system

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Summary

Introduction

As a feedback to this problem, focused interest on electric vehicles has increased in recent years [1]. The batteries are a key component in the development of the electric vehicles. Lithium-ion batteries represent the premium choice of the power source in hybrid electrical vehicles (HEV), plug-in hybrid vehicles (PHEV), and full electrical vehicles (FEV) due to their high energy density, high power density, and low self-discharge rate [2,3,4,5]. The development of Li-ion batteries technology is limited by safety restrictions because of their less tolerance to abuse [6,7]. In the case of FEV, a Li-ion battery provides high power and energy densities, but the potential risks of thermal runaway and ageing are omnipresent. The battery must operate at a controlled temperature between 15 ◦ C and 35 ◦ C, and the temperature distribution in the cells must be as uniform as possible (5 ◦ C variation) [1,7]

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