Discharge by short circuit currents of parallel-connected lithium-ion cells in thermal propagation

S Koch, A Fill, K Kelesiadou, KP Birke - Batteries, 2019 - mdpi.com
S Koch, A Fill, K Kelesiadou, KP Birke
Batteries, 2019mdpi.com
The increasing need for high capacity batteries in plug-in hybrids and all-electric vehicles
gives rise to the question of whether these batteries should be equipped with a few large
capacity cells or rather many low capacity cells in parallel. This article demonstrates the
possible benefits of smaller cells connected in parallel because of discharge effects.
Measurements have been conducted proving the beneficial influence of a lower SoC on the
thermal runaway behaviour of lithium-ion cells. A second test series examines the short …
The increasing need for high capacity batteries in plug-in hybrids and all-electric vehicles gives rise to the question of whether these batteries should be equipped with a few large capacity cells or rather many low capacity cells in parallel. This article demonstrates the possible benefits of smaller cells connected in parallel because of discharge effects. Measurements have been conducted proving the beneficial influence of a lower SoC on the thermal runaway behaviour of lithium-ion cells. A second test series examines the short circuit currents during an ongoing thermal propagation in parallel-connected cells. With the help of a developed equivalent circuit model and the results of the test series two major system parameters, the ohmic resistance of a cell during thermal runaway Rtr and the resistance post thermal runaway Rptr are extracted for the test set-up. A further developed equivalent circuit model and its analytical description are presented and illustrate the great impact of Rptr on the overall discharged capacity. According to the model, cells with a capacity of no more than Ccell = 10–15 Ah and a parallel-connection of 24 cells show the most potential to discharge a significant amount.
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