Cooling of Electric Vehicle Batteries
Cooling of Electric Vehicle Batteries
Cooling of Electric Vehicle Batteries
Introduction:
There are nowadays different blending levels of hybrid electric vehicle and
pure electric vehicle available on the current automobile market. The High
voltage batteries that are used today in Hybrid Electric vehicles and Electric
vehicles utilize cooling systems to keep the battery packs within optimal
operating temperature ranges. Manufacturers spend a generous amount of
money to design these cooling systems to keep the batteries within these
safe operating temperature requirements during harsh conditions, such as
extreme cold and heat.
Cathode
the cathode, is the oxidizing electrode which receives electrons from
the external circuit.
Electrolyte
The electrolyte is the medium to transfer ions between electrodes
inside the cell.
Separator
Is used to isolate electrodes.
Thermal Issues of Li-ion battery:
1. Cooling
Battery cells will not only generate electricity but also heat. This heat should
be moved from the battery pack so, a cooling function is required in BTMS.
2. Heating
All batteries suffer in cold temperatures because their electrochemical
processes slow and overall internal resistance increases.
3. Insulation
In extreme cold or hot weather, the temperature difference between the
inside and outside of the battery pack is much larger than that in mild
weather. Battery temperature will thus fall (cold) or rise (hot) .To prevent
this, good insulation can slow down the falling or rising of battery
temperature.
4. Ventilation
Ventilation is required to exhaust the hazardous gases within battery pack.
Technologies of Battery Thermal Management
Systems (BTMS):
Neatly arranged battery pack has the best cooling performance and
temperature uniformity, followed by staggered arrangement and finally
cross arrangement.
a. Passive Air Cooling and Heating
It is an air-cooling system that uses only external air. also passive system can
offer some hundreds of watts cooling or heating power
The liquid cooling is also riskier to use than air cooling due to it is leakage potential
that could result in a short circuit. a short circuit could occur when the positive
terminal of a battery somehow gets direct into contact with the negative terminal.
Liquid is another heat transfer fluid to transfer heat. There are generally two groups of
liquids applied for thermal management systems One is (direct-contact liquid) which
can contact the battery cells directly such as mineral oil. The other is (indirect-contact
liquid which can only contact the battery cells indirectly such as a mixture of ethylene
glycol and water indirect contact systems are preferred in order to achieve better
isolation between battery module and surroundings and thus better safety
performance.
In passive liquid system the heat-sink for cooling is a radiator but this system
has no ability to heat.
Heat transfer fluid is circulated by the pump within a closed system. The
circulating fluid absorbs heat from battery pack and releases heat via a
radiator. The cooling power depends strongly on the temperature between
ambient air and battery. Fans behind the radiator can improve the cooling
performance, but if ambient air is higher than the battery temperature or the
difference between them is too small, the passive liquid system becomes
ineffective.
Similar to active liquid systems but direct refrigerant system uses refrigerant
directly as heat transfer fluid circulating through battery.
This refrigerant direct cooling thermal management system is not widely
used in electric vehicles. The BTMS directly integrates the battery cooling
system into an existing vapor compression cycle, and the battery is directly
connected to the evaporator plate without the additional condensers, heat
exchangers and coolant exchange circuits. The system principle is shown in
Figure:
V. Heat Pipe
Heat pipe is another way to upgrade passive air systems.
The flat copper envelope of the heat pipe was under partial vacuum. The
capillary structure is made of sintered copper powder. The heat pipe uses
water as the working fluid. Water on the evaporator side will absorb heat
and become vapour lower 100°C due to low pressure inside. Water on the
condenser will dissipate heat to the surrounding and become liquid again.
This cycle repeats again and again.
A battery as heat source sits below the heat pipe (on the evaporating side).
Cooling fins as heat sinks are on the heat pipe (on the condensing side)