4.4 Article

Passive thermal management system of lithium-ion batteries employing metal foam/pcm composite for the development of electric vehicles

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/15567036.2023.2171515

Keywords

Thermal management; phase change material; lithium-ion batteries; metal foam

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This paper proposes a novel experimental method to dissipate and maintain the thermal energy emitted by LIBs based on a nickel foam/paraffin composite and a composite of copper foam/paraffin for thermal management of Panasonic NCR 18650B cylindrical lithium-ion battery cells. The results indicate that the surface temperature of the battery is significantly reduced by the application of nickel foam and copper foam/paraffin composite, compared to ambient air convection and PCM.
Electric vehicles with a pack of lithium-ion batteries (LIBs) are taking a significant place in the field of transportation. Since lithium-ion battery efficiency relies on battery pack temperature, the temperature of the battery pack must be maintained within the safe limits for proper working of the system. This paper proposes a novel experimental method to dissipate and maintain the thermal energy emitted by LIBs based on a nickel foam/paraffin composite and a composite of copper foam/paraffin for thermal management of Panasonic NCR 18650B cylindrical lithium-ion battery cells. The results indicate that the surface temperature of the battery is reduced by 30.95% by comparing with ambient air convection and 24% temperature reduction by comparing with PCM by the application of nickel foam at a 2C discharge rate. By using copper foam/paraffin composite 34% and 25% temperature reduction by comparing with ambient air convection and PCM (paraffin) accordingly was achieved at a 2C discharge rate. Additionally, the result of temperature uniformity on the thermal management of the battery pack was also studied.

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