ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
We study two thermo-electrochemical models for lithium-ion batteries. The first is based on volume averaging the electrode microstructure whereas the second is based on the pseudo-two-dimensional (P2D) approach which treats the electrode as a collection of spherical particles. A scaling analysis is used to reduce the volume-averaged model and show that the electrochemical reactions are the dominant source of heat. Matched asymptotic expansions are used to compute solutions of the volume-averaged model for the cases of constant applied current, oscillating applied current, and constant cell potential. The asymptotic and numerical solutions of the volume-averaged model are in remarkable agreement with numerical solutions of the thermal P2D model for (dis)charge rates up to 2C, and reasonable agreement is found at 4C. Homogenisation is then used to derive a thermal model for a battery consisting of several connected lithium-ion cells. Despite accounting for the Arrhenius dependence of the reaction coefficients, we show that thermal runaway does not occur in the model. Instead, the cell potential is simply pushed closer to the open-circuit potential. We also show that in many cases, the homogenised battery model can be solved analytically, making it ideal for use in on-board thermal management systems.
We present a porous electrode model for lithium-ion batteries using Butler--Volmer reaction kinetics. We model lithium concentration in both the solid and fluid phase along with solid and liquid electric potential. Through asymptotic reduction, we sh
Solid state battery technology has recently garnered considerable interest from companies including Toyota, BMW, Dyson, and others. The primary driver behind the commercialization of solid state batteries (SSBs) is to enable the use of lithium metal
Despite the ever-increasing use across different sectors, the lithium-ion batteries (LiBs) have continually seen serious concerns over their thermal vulnerability. The LiB operation is associated with the heat generation and buildup effect, which man
Silicon is a promising candidate for negative electrodes due to its high theoretical specific capacity (~3579 mAh g-1) and low lithiation potential (~0.40 V vs Li). However, its practical applications in battery have been inhibited by the large volum
Li-ion rechargeable batteries have enabled the wireless revolution transforming global communication. Future challenges, however, demands distributed energy supply at a level that is not feasible with the current energy-storage technology. New materi