Mechanical Characterization of Lithium-Ion Battery Micro Components for Development of Homogenized and Multilayer Material Models
CIVINS === The overall battery research of the Impact and Crashworthiness Laboratory (ICL) at MIT has been focused on understanding the battery’s mechanical properties so that individual battery cells and battery packs can be characterized during crash events. The objective of this research is to...
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ndltd-nps.edu-oai-calhoun.nps.edu-10945-430742014-11-27T16:20:08Z Mechanical Characterization of Lithium-Ion Battery Micro Components for Development of Homogenized and Multilayer Material Models Miller, Kyle M. Wierzbicki, Tomasz Mechanical Engineering CIVINS The overall battery research of the Impact and Crashworthiness Laboratory (ICL) at MIT has been focused on understanding the battery’s mechanical properties so that individual battery cells and battery packs can be characterized during crash events. The objective of this research is to better understand the battery component (electrode and separator) properties under different loading conditions. In this work, over 200 tests were conducted on battery components. These tests include uniaxial stress, biaxial punch, multilayer, single layer, short-circuit testing, wet vs dry specimen testing, strain rate testing, and more. Additionally, a scanning electron microscope was used to view the battery components at a micro level for the purpose of better understanding the aforementioned test results. During these tests, it was observed that many of the electrodes in the Li-ion batteries are damaged during the battery manufacturing process. Also, the two methods of manufacturing battery separator were analyzed and their resulting mechanical properties were characterized. These results will be used to further refine and validate a high-level, robust, and accurate computational tool to predict strength, energy absorption, and the onset of electric short circuit of batteries under real-world crash loading situations. The cell deformation models will then be applied to the battery stack and beyond, thereby enabling rationalization of greater optimization of the battery pack/vehicle combination with respect to tolerance of battery crush intrusion behavior. Besides improving crash performance, the finite element models contribute substantially to the reduction of the cost of prototyping and shorten the development cycle of new electric vehicles. 2014-08-20T22:57:16Z 2014-08-20T22:57:16Z 2014-06 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10945/43074 This publication is a work of the U.S. Government as defined in Title 17, United States Code, Section 101. As such, it is in the public domain, and under the provisions of Title 17, United States Code, Section 105, it may not be copyrighted. Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School |
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CIVINS === The overall battery research of the Impact and Crashworthiness Laboratory (ICL) at MIT
has been focused on understanding the battery’s mechanical properties so that individual
battery cells and battery packs can be characterized during crash events.
The objective of this research is to better understand the battery component (electrode
and separator) properties under different loading conditions. In this work, over 200 tests
were conducted on battery components. These tests include uniaxial stress, biaxial
punch, multilayer, single layer, short-circuit testing, wet vs dry specimen testing, strain
rate testing, and more. Additionally, a scanning electron microscope was used to view the
battery components at a micro level for the purpose of better understanding the
aforementioned test results.
During these tests, it was observed that many of the electrodes in the Li-ion batteries are
damaged during the battery manufacturing process. Also, the two methods of
manufacturing battery separator were analyzed and their resulting mechanical properties
were characterized.
These results will be used to further refine and validate a high-level, robust, and accurate
computational tool to predict strength, energy absorption, and the onset of electric short
circuit of batteries under real-world crash loading situations. The cell deformation models
will then be applied to the battery stack and beyond, thereby enabling rationalization of
greater optimization of the battery pack/vehicle combination with respect to tolerance of
battery crush intrusion behavior. Besides improving crash performance, the finite element
models contribute substantially to the reduction of the cost of prototyping and shorten the
development cycle of new electric vehicles. |
author2 |
Wierzbicki, Tomasz |
author_facet |
Wierzbicki, Tomasz Miller, Kyle M. |
author |
Miller, Kyle M. |
spellingShingle |
Miller, Kyle M. Mechanical Characterization of Lithium-Ion Battery Micro Components for Development of Homogenized and Multilayer Material Models |
author_sort |
Miller, Kyle M. |
title |
Mechanical Characterization of Lithium-Ion Battery Micro Components for Development of Homogenized and Multilayer Material Models |
title_short |
Mechanical Characterization of Lithium-Ion Battery Micro Components for Development of Homogenized and Multilayer Material Models |
title_full |
Mechanical Characterization of Lithium-Ion Battery Micro Components for Development of Homogenized and Multilayer Material Models |
title_fullStr |
Mechanical Characterization of Lithium-Ion Battery Micro Components for Development of Homogenized and Multilayer Material Models |
title_full_unstemmed |
Mechanical Characterization of Lithium-Ion Battery Micro Components for Development of Homogenized and Multilayer Material Models |
title_sort |
mechanical characterization of lithium-ion battery micro components for development of homogenized and multilayer material models |
publisher |
Monterey, California. Naval Postgraduate School |
publishDate |
2014 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10945/43074 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT millerkylem mechanicalcharacterizationoflithiumionbatterymicrocomponentsfordevelopmentofhomogenizedandmultilayermaterialmodels |
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1716726156697272320 |