TY - JOUR
T1 - Analysis of a lithium-ion battery cooling system for electric vehicles using a phase-change material and heat pipes
AU - Yamada, Tatsuya
AU - Koshiyama, Takafumi
AU - Yoshikawa, Manabu
AU - Yamada, Takashi
AU - Ono, Naoki
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors wish to acknowledge Prof. Tomohiro Akiyama and Dr. Yoshihiro Nomura at Hokkaido University; Mr. Hiroyuki Kawasaki and Mr. Seiichiro Ishii of the Uzushio Electric Co., Ltd. for their help and assistance in the research. We also thank Fujikura Corporation for preparing the heat pipes and the fins heat sink. We are very grateful for the support from the strategic international cooperative program of Japan Science and Technology Agency in the field of highly efficient energy utilization.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 The Japan Society of Mechanical Engineers.
PY - 2017
Y1 - 2017
N2 - The energy and power densities of lithium-ion batteries (LiBs) are bound to improve in the future. To use such high-performance battery systems as the power source of electric vehicles, the safety and the stability of these systems need to be guaranteed and abnormal heat emissions should not lead to thermal runaway. In this study, we have developed a prototype hybrid cooling system combined with a phase-change material and heat pipes to control abnormal heat emissions in LiBs. The system was built using paraffin wax as the phase change material, heat pipes, and an electric heater modeled on A4-sized laminated-type LiBs pack. We conducted some experiments using this system under conditions that would result in abnormal heating and thermal runaway. As a result, we were able to confirm that the time needed to reach temperatures leading to thermal runaway in the modeled battery pack was extended to 708 seconds by adopting our proposed cooling system, from 104 seconds in the case with no cooling device. A numerical analysis of the heat balance and thermal distribution was also calculated. The calculation results confirmed the thermal behavior in the experimental system, and we investigated the effect of the heat pipes and PCM. The issues that need to be solved to make practical use of the cooling system were also clarified by those discussions.
AB - The energy and power densities of lithium-ion batteries (LiBs) are bound to improve in the future. To use such high-performance battery systems as the power source of electric vehicles, the safety and the stability of these systems need to be guaranteed and abnormal heat emissions should not lead to thermal runaway. In this study, we have developed a prototype hybrid cooling system combined with a phase-change material and heat pipes to control abnormal heat emissions in LiBs. The system was built using paraffin wax as the phase change material, heat pipes, and an electric heater modeled on A4-sized laminated-type LiBs pack. We conducted some experiments using this system under conditions that would result in abnormal heating and thermal runaway. As a result, we were able to confirm that the time needed to reach temperatures leading to thermal runaway in the modeled battery pack was extended to 708 seconds by adopting our proposed cooling system, from 104 seconds in the case with no cooling device. A numerical analysis of the heat balance and thermal distribution was also calculated. The calculation results confirmed the thermal behavior in the experimental system, and we investigated the effect of the heat pipes and PCM. The issues that need to be solved to make practical use of the cooling system were also clarified by those discussions.
KW - Abnormal heat
KW - Heat pipe
KW - Latent heat
KW - Numerical calculation
KW - Phase-change material
KW - Thermal runaway
KW - Thermal storage
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U2 - 10.1299/jtst.2017jtst0011
DO - 10.1299/jtst.2017jtst0011
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85019692716
SN - 1880-5566
VL - 12
JO - Journal of Thermal Science and Technology
JF - Journal of Thermal Science and Technology
IS - 1
M1 - jtst0011
ER -