Description |
1 online resource (10 pages) : color illustrations. |
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text txt rdacontent |
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computer c rdamedia |
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online resource cr rdacarrier |
Series |
Conference paper ; NREL/CP-5400-73955 |
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Conference paper (National Renewable Energy Laboratory (U.S.)) ; 5400-73955.
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Note |
"February 2020." |
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"Presented at the ASME 2019 International Technical Conference and Exhibition on Packaging and Integration of Electronic and Photonic Microsystems (IPACK2019), Anaheim, California, October 7-9, 2019"--Page 1 of cover. |
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"Funding provided by U.S. Department of Energy Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy Vehicle Technologies Office"--Verso of title page. |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references (page 10). |
Funding |
DE-AC36-08GO28308 |
Note |
Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (NREL, viewed on August 5, 2020). |
Contents |
1. Introduction -- 2. Methodology. 2.1. Thermal conductivity measurement -- 2.2. Multiphysics modeling -- 3. Results and discussion. 3.1. Testing results -- 4. Conclusions. |
Summary |
Temperature critically affects the performance, life and safety of lithium-ion batteries. Therefore, it is essential to understand heat generation and dissipation within individual battery cells and battery packs to plan a proper thermal management strategy. One of the key challenges is that interfacial heat transfer of a battery unit is difficult to quantify. The steady-state absolute method and the transient laser-flash-diffusivity method were employed to measure heat conductivities of battery layer stacks and individual battery layer separately. Results show flash diffusivity method gives higher thermal conductivity at both cross-plane and in-plane directions. The difference is primarily caused by interfacial thermal resistance so that it can be estimated by steady-state and transient measurements. To investigate the effects of interfacial thermal transport beyond individual cell level, a multiphysics battery model is used. The model is built upon a multi-scale multi-domain modeling framework for battery packs that accounts for the interplay across multiple physical phenomena. Benefits of a battery module using thermal management materials are quantified through numerical experiments. During a thermal runaway event, it is found interfacial thermal resistance can mitigate thermal runaway in a battery module by significantly reducing heat transfer between cells. |
Subject |
Lithium ion batteries -- United States -- Observations.
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Thermal conductivity -- United States -- Observations.
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Heat -- Transmission -- United States -- Observations.
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Batteries au lithium-ion -- États-Unis -- Observations.
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Conductivité thermique -- États-Unis -- Observations.
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Chaleur -- Transmission -- États-Unis -- Observations.
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Heat -- Transmission
(OCoLC)fst00953826
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Lithium ion batteries (OCoLC)fst01764640
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Thermal conductivity (OCoLC)fst01736449
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United States (OCoLC)fst01204155 https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/entity/E39PBJtxgQXMWqmjMjjwXRHgrq
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Indexed Term |
interfacial thermal resistance |
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Li-ion battery |
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multiphysics modeling |
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thermal management |
Genre/Form |
Observations (OCoLC)fst01423822
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Added Author |
Cao, Lei, author.
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National Renewable Energy Laboratory (U.S.), issuing body.
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United States. Department of Energy. Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, sponsoring body.
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Added Title |
Role of interfacial thermal resistance in lithium-ion battery thermal management |
Standard No. |
1600891 OSTI ID |
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0000-0001-7961-9911 |
Gpo Item No. |
0430-P-04 (online) |
Sudoc No. |
E 9.17:NREL/CP-5400-73955 |
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