http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/11/151125083823.htm
Smart chip tells you how healthy your battery is
November 25, 2015  Nanyang Technological University

[image  / Nanyang Technological University
http://images.sciencedaily.com/2015/11/151125083823_1_540x360.jpg
NTU Prof Rachid Yazami holding his small smart chip which tells the exact
state of charge of a battery.
]

Summary: A smart chip that can tell you how healthy is your battery and if
it is safe for use, has been developed by researchers. 

Scientists from Nanyang Technological University (NTU Singapore) have
developed a smart chip which can tell you how healthy is your battery and if
it is safe for use.

If the battery in your smartphone or electric vehicle is faulty and is at
risk of catching fire, this smart chip will warn you. Current warning
systems only alert users when the battery is already overheating which may
be too late for any remedial action.

Developed by Professor Rachid Yazami of the Energy Research Institute @ NTU
(ERI@N), this smart chip is small enough to be embedded in almost all
batteries, from the small batteries in mobile devices to the huge power
packs found in electric vehicles and advanced aeroplanes.

A pioneer in battery research, Prof Yazami won the 2014 Draper Prize for
Engineering awarded by the Washington-based National Academy of Engineering
for being one of the three founders of lithium-ion battery. The award
recognised his discovery in the 1980s in making lithium-ion batteries safely
rechargeable, paving the way for its universal use today.

"Although the risk of a battery failing and catching fire is very low, with
the billions of lithium-ion batteries being produced yearly, even a
one-in-a-million chance would mean over a thousand failures," explained Prof
Yazami, who holds more than 50 patents and has authored more than 200
scientific papers, book chapters and reports on batteries.

"This poses a serious risk for electric vehicles and even in advanced
aeroplanes as usually big battery packs have hundreds of cells or more
bundled together to power the vehicle or aircraft. If there is a chemical
fire caused by a single failed battery, it could cause fires in nearby
batteries, leading to an explosion."

Patented technology
Embedded in the smart chip is a proprietary algorithm developed by Prof
Yazami that is based on electrochemical thermodynamics measurements (ETM
technology).

Current lithium-ion batteries have a chip in them which only shows voltage
and temperature readings. Today's battery chips are unable to detect
symptoms of a malfunction and can also show only the estimated amount of
charge the battery is holding.

In comparison, Prof Yazami's patented algorithm is able to analyse both the
state of health and the state of charge through a 3-dimensional chart. On a
monitor screen, it looks similar to a ski route down a mountain.

Drawing on the analogy of a fingerprint, he said: "The 'ski route' of a
brand new battery looks different from those of a degraded or faulty battery
-- just like how two fingerprints will look quite different."

"In addition to knowing the degradation of batteries, our technology can
also tell the exact state of charge of the battery, and thus optimise the
charging so the battery can be maintained in its best condition while being
charged faster," added Prof Yazami, the Director of Battery Programmes at
ERI@N.

"My vision for the future is that every battery will have this chip, which
will in turn reduce the risk of battery fires in electronic devices and
electric vehicles while extending their life span."

Worldwide annual production of portable battery cells have been predicted to
grow from 13 billion in 2014, to over 35 billion by 2025 according to a
report by Avicenne Energy.

On track for commercialisation

The smart chip took Prof Yazami more than five years to develop and is now
marketed by his start-up, KVI Pte Ltd. Working together with Prof Yazami on
developing the smart chip platform at ERIAN is research scientist Mr Sohaib
El Outmani.

KVI is now being incubated by NTU's commercialisation arm, NTUitive. KVI is
developing this chip into a series of products, which include battery packs
for recharging mobile devices, charge gauge for electric vehicles, and a
smart chip for every battery.

The start-up company has an exclusive license on Prof Yazami's ETM
technology which is based on his research done in NTU Singapore, California
Institute of Technology (Caltech) and French National Centre for Scientific
Research (CNRS).

His research incorporates two other unique factors: entropy, a measure of
disorder or randomness of a system, and enthalpy, which is the sum of
internal energy of a system.

It is expected that the technology will be made available for licensing by
chipmakers and battery manufacturers before the end of 2016.
[© sciencedaily.com]
...
http://www.ntu.edu.sg
Nanyang Technological University



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