Crushing a jellyroll; Keeping ahead of thermal runaway

http://web.mit.edu/newsoffice/2013/crash-testing-lithium-ion-batteries-0604.html
[image] Crash-testing lithium-ion batteries
by Jennifer Chu  Jun 4 2013

[image  / flickr.com/InSapphoWeTrust
http://img.mit.edu/newsoffice/images/article_images/20130603161736-0.jpg
Crash-testing lithium-ion batteries  
]

Laboratory crash tests show both vulnerabilities and ways to improve the
safety of lithium-ion batteries used in electric and hybrid vehicles.

Lithium-ion batteries are lightweight, fully rechargeable, and can pack a
lot of energy into a small volume — making them attractive as power sources
for hybrid and electric vehicles.

However, there’s a significant downside: Overheating and collisions may
cause the batteries to short-circuit and burst into flames. Engineers have
worked to improve the safety of lithium-ion batteries, largely by designing
elaborate systems to cool and protect battery packs.

But Tomasz Wierzbicki, a professor of applied mechanics and director of
MIT’s Impact and Crashworthiness Laboratory, says there may be ways to make
batteries themselves more resilient — an improvement that could reduce the
bulk of protective housing, in turn reducing fuel costs.

First, though, Wierzbicki says engineers need to understand the mechanical
properties and physical limits of existing batteries.

Now he and MIT postdoc Elham Sahraei have studied the resilience of
cylindrical lithium-ion batteries similar to those used to power the Tesla
Roadster and other electric vehicles. The team subjected individual cells to
forces mimicking frontal, rear and side collisions. Using data from these
experiments, the researchers developed a computer model that accurately
simulates how a battery can deform and short-circuit under various crash
scenarios.

Among their observations, the researchers found that a battery’s shell
casing — an outer lining of aluminum or steel — may contribute differently
to overall resilience, depending on the scenario. Making shell casings more
ductile or flexible, the team says, may be one way to improve the safety of
lithium-ion batteries.

Wierzbicki says the team’s model may be used to design new batteries, as
well as to test existing batteries. The model may also be incorporated into
whole-vehicle simulations to predict a battery pack’s risk of “thermal
runaway,” a term engineers use to describe cases of catastrophic fire and
smoke.

“We are developing computational tools to redesign batteries so the new
generation is more resilient,” Wierzbicki says. “These batteries may be able
to take much higher loads without getting into the thermal runaway that
everyone’s afraid of.”

The team has published its results this month in the Journal of Power
Sources.

Crushing a jellyroll

Wierzbicki says that in order to know how a battery will deform in a crash,
it’s important to “start from the smallest building block.” In the case of
lithium-ion battery packs, that building block is the “jellyroll”: a single
battery’s interior, which is made up of alternating anode and cathode
layers, and a separating layer, all rolled up and encased in a protective
tube of aluminum or steel.

The batteries work when lithium ions travel across each separating layer,
creating a current. But when the separator is compromised by the forces
generated by an impact, a battery can short-circuit, and possibly catch
fire.

To test a battery’s resilience, the team crushed batteries between metal
plates in various orientations, and used metal spheres and rods to dent and
deform individual cells. The tests were designed to mimic certain
repercussions of a crash: batteries crushing each other, or parts of a
battery pack piercing the individual batteries inside.

To prevent “catastrophic thermal runaway,” the researchers ran each test on
batteries that were 90 percent discharged; the remaining 10 percent charge
still allowed measurement of sudden drops in voltage. In addition to
voltage, Wierzbicki and Sahraei monitored battery temperature and structural
deformation after impact.

Keeping ahead of thermal runaway

The researchers used their data to develop a computational model for how a
single cylindrical lithium-ion battery deforms under various crash
scenarios. The model, which the researchers validated with further
experimental tests, accurately predicted battery indentation under a certain
load or force.

“With the knowledge of how a battery reacts in a crash, you can design your
battery pack to resist damage,” Sahraei says. “When you have a better
understanding of how the cells react, you may find you could reduce the
weight of the battery pack by reducing the excessive protective structures
around it.”

Sahraei, Wierzbicki and their colleagues are continuing to study the
physical limits of cylindrical lithium-ion batteries, as well as the pouch
and prismatic batteries that are used to power vehicles like the Chevrolet
Volt. Ultimately, the group hopes to scale up experiments to test the
integrity of whole battery packs, and incorporate battery models into
whole-vehicle simulations. To further explore new and safer designs,
Wierzbicki is forming a battery consortium that will include lithium-ion
battery manufacturers and car companies.

Per Onnerud, chief technology officer at Cloteam, an energy-storage startup
in Framingham, Mass., says the safety of electric vehicles’ batteries will
become a more pressing issue in the near future: To reduce carbon dioxide
emissions, federal officials hope to dramatically increase sales of plug-in
electric vehicles by 2020.

“In order for us as a society to realize these targets, the systems have to
be intrinsically safe on the lowest-level component,” says Onnerud, who did
not participate in the research. “This is an important part of driving cost
down. It all starts with the design.”

While it’s virtually impossible to design lithium-ion batteries to be
risk-free, Wierzbicki says that models like his can help to reduce
catastrophic outcomes in accidents involving electric vehicles.

“There’s a certain critical velocity at which bad things happen,” Wierzbicki
says. “Right now, thermal runaway might occur during a 20-mph side
collision. We’d like to increase that threshold to maybe 40 mph. By doing
this, maybe 95 percent of accidents would be safe from the point of view of
a battery exploding. But there will always be some collision — for example,
a very fast car hits a tree or a post — and that’s not a survivable accident
for people and also for batteries. So you cannot have absolute safety. But
we can increase this safety.”
[© MIT news]
...
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0378775313007453
Homogenized mechanical properties for the jellyroll of cylindrical
Lithium-ion cells




For all EVLN posts use:
http://electric-vehicle-discussion-list.413529.n4.nabble.com/template/NamlServlet.jtp?macro=search_page&node=413529&query=evln&sort=date

Here are today's archive-only EV posts:

EVent: 5th Annual Michigan EV Show Sat 6/8 9a-4p @Livonia, MI
EVLN: Dual CHAdeMO & SAE-Combo Level-3 EVSE Installed in VT
EVLN: Belgian Granny Sex Rap The Key To Selling Electric Cars? (video)
EVLN: Leaf acceleration is so addictive I had to slam on the brakes
+
EVLN: Sweet lease deals sell out of EVs in LA, CA (video)


{brucedp.150m.com}



--
View this message in context: 
http://electric-vehicle-discussion-list.413529.n4.nabble.com/EVLN-Crash-testing-lithium-ion-batteries-tp4663454.html
Sent from the Electric Vehicle Discussion List mailing list archive at 
Nabble.com.
_______________________________________________
UNSUBSCRIBE: http://www.evdl.org/help/index.html#usub
http://lists.evdl.org/listinfo.cgi/ev-evdl.org
For EV drag racing discussion, please use NEDRA 
(http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NEDRA)

Reply via email to