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Mapping internal temperatures during high-rate battery applications

Author

Listed:
  • T. M. M. Heenan

    (University College of London
    The Faraday Institution, Harwell Science and Innovation Campus)

  • I. Mombrini

    (University College of London
    The European Synchrotron)

  • A. Llewellyn

    (University College of London)

  • S. Checchia

    (The European Synchrotron)

  • C. Tan

    (University College of London
    The Faraday Institution, Harwell Science and Innovation Campus)

  • M. J. Johnson

    (University College of London)

  • A. Jnawali

    (University College of London)

  • G. Garbarino

    (The European Synchrotron)

  • R. Jervis

    (University College of London
    The Faraday Institution, Harwell Science and Innovation Campus)

  • D. J. L. Brett

    (University College of London
    The Faraday Institution, Harwell Science and Innovation Campus)

  • M. Michiel

    (The European Synchrotron)

  • P. R. Shearing

    (University College of London
    The Faraday Institution, Harwell Science and Innovation Campus)

Abstract

Electric vehicles demand high charge and discharge rates creating potentially dangerous temperature rises. Lithium-ion cells are sealed during their manufacture, making internal temperatures challenging to probe1. Tracking current collector expansion using X-ray diffraction (XRD) permits non-destructive internal temperature measurements2; however, cylindrical cells are known to experience complex internal strain3,4. Here, we characterize the state of charge, mechanical strain and temperature within lithium-ion 18650 cells operated at high rates (above 3C) by means of two advanced synchrotron XRD methods: first, as entire cross-sectional temperature maps during open-circuit cooling and second, single-point temperatures during charge–discharge cycling. We observed that a 20-minute discharge on an energy-optimized cell (3.5 Ah) resulted in internal temperatures above 70 °C, whereas a faster 12-minute discharge on a power-optimized cell (1.5 Ah) resulted in substantially lower temperatures (below 50 °C). However, when comparing the two cells under the same electrical current, the peak temperatures were similar, for example, a 6 A discharge resulted in 40 °C peak temperatures for both cell types. We observe that the operando temperature rise is due to heat accumulation, strongly influenced by the charging protocol, for example, constant current and/or constant voltage; mechanisms that worsen with cycling because degradation increases the cell resistance. Design mitigations for temperature-related battery issues should now be explored using this new methodology to provide opportunities for improved thermal management during high-rate electric vehicle applications.

Suggested Citation

  • T. M. M. Heenan & I. Mombrini & A. Llewellyn & S. Checchia & C. Tan & M. J. Johnson & A. Jnawali & G. Garbarino & R. Jervis & D. J. L. Brett & M. Michiel & P. R. Shearing, 2023. "Mapping internal temperatures during high-rate battery applications," Nature, Nature, vol. 617(7961), pages 507-512, May.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:nature:v:617:y:2023:i:7961:d:10.1038_s41586-023-05913-z
    DOI: 10.1038/s41586-023-05913-z
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