Self-heating lithium-ion battery could
beat the winter woes
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. -- A
lithium-ion battery that self heats if the temperature is below 32 degrees
Fahrenheit has multiple applications, but may have the most impact on relieving
winter "range anxiety" for electric vehicle owners, according to a
team of researchers from Penn State and EC Power, State College.
"It
is a long standing problem that batteries do not perform well at subzero
temperatures," said Chao-Yang Wang, William E. Diefenderfer
Chair of mechanical engineering, professor of chemical
engineering and
professor of materials science and engineering and director,Electrochemical
Engine Center.
"This may not be an issue for phones and laptops, but is a huge barrier
for electric vehicles, drones, outdoor robots and space applications."
Conventional batteries at
below freezing temperatures suffer severe power loss, which leads to slow
charging in cold weather, restricted regenerative breaking and reduction of
vehicle cruise range by as much as 40 percent, the researchers said in today's
(Jan. 20) issue of Nature. These problems require larger and more
expensive battery packs to compensate for the cold sapping of energy.
"We don't want
electric cars to lose 40 to 50 percent of their cruise range in frigid weather
as reported by the American Automobile Association and we don't want the cold
weather to exacerbate range anxiety," said Wang. "In cold
winters, range anxiety is the last thing we need."
The researchers, relying on
previous patents by EC Power, developed the all-climate battery to weigh only
1.5 percent more and cost only 0.04 percent of the base battery. They
also designed it to go from -4 to 32 degrees Fahrenheit within 20 seconds and
from -22 to 32 degrees Fahrenheit in 30 seconds and consume only 3.8 percent
and 5.5 percent of the cell's capacity. This is far less than the 40
percent loss in conventional lithium ion batteries.
The all-climate battery
uses a nickel foil of 50-micrometer thickness with one end attached to the
negative terminal and the other extending outside the cell to create a third
terminal. A temperature sensor attached to a switch causes electrons to
flow through the nickel foil to complete the circuit. This rapidly heats
up the nickel foil through resistance heating and warms the inside of the
battery. Once the battery is at 32 degrees Fahrenheit, the switch turns
off and the electric current flows in the normal manner.
While other materials could
also serve as a resistance-heating element, nickel is low cost and works well.
"Next we would like to
broaden the work to a new paradigm called SmartBattery," said Wang.
"We think we can use similar structures or principles to actively regulate
the battery's safety, performance and life."
Also working on this
project were Guangsheng Zhang and Yongjun Leng, research associates in
mechanical engineering; and Xiao-Guang Yang, postdoctoral Fellow, all at Penn
State. Terrence Xu, Shanhai Ge, Yan Ji, innovation engineers, all at EC Power
also collaborated on this research. Wang is also the Chief Technology
Officer and founder of the startup EC Power.
EC Power supported this
project.
By A'ndrea Elyse Messer
http://news.psu.edu/story/388410/2016/01/20/research/self-heating-lithium-ion-battery-could-beat-winter-woes
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