Abstract
Lithium-ion batteries are used in a wide variety of applications. To meet the power and energy demands of these applications, battery packs are composed of hundreds to thousands of cells. The electrical and thermal interactions between cells introduce additional complexity in the pack dynamics. To capture these effects, a battery pack model composed of 192 cells based on a first-generation (2012) Nissan Leaf battery pack is developed in MATLAB/Simulink/Simscape. With this model, we simulate the electrical dynamics (using a first-order equivalent-circuit model), the thermal dynamics (using a first-order lumped-parameter thermal model), and the aging dynamics (using a semi-empirical severity factor-based model) of every cell in the pack and we also create a pack thermal model that explicitly captures the heat exchange between the modules, and the cells contained within, during operation. The models are calibrated and validated, both at the cell and pack level, with experimental data. Two different case studies of this pack model are investigated. In the first case study, an initial, normally distributed, cell-to-cell capacity variation is introduced and its effect on the pack voltage and module temperatures is studied. In the second case study, we deliberately insert cells with lower than nominal capacity into the pack and we investigate how this type of initial cell-to-cell capacity variation affects the pack’s ability to deliver energy over time. Finally, we also study how parallel-connected cells can reduce the effects of cell-to-cell variations at the expense of increased aging of the pack overall.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 8122-8136 |
| Number of pages | 15 |
| Journal | IEEE Transactions on Transportation Electrification |
| Volume | 10 |
| Issue number | 4 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - 2024 |
Funding
The authors thank Dr. Maitri Uppaluri, Dr. Le Xu, and Luigi Tresca (Energy Sciences and Engineering, Stanford University) for their feedback on the manuscript. Experimental data used in this work was provided by Dr. Eric Dufek and Matthew Shirk (Idaho National Laboratory). This work is part of Laboratory Call Project L096-1568 in partnership with The Ohio State University and Oak Ridge National Laboratory. This research is enabled in part through computational resources and support provided by Sherlock compute cluster @ Stanford University (https://www.sherlock.stanford.edu).
Keywords
- Aging
- electric vehicles (EVs)
- lithium-ion batteries