The invention relates to an electrical connector for a battery module.
Electrical connectors are known from the prior art which electrically connect at least one battery cell of a battery module to a detection unit, for example by means of welding electrically conductive wires to the battery cell and the detection unit.
It is a disadvantage of the prior art that various manufacturing steps are required for producing and installing an electrically conductive connection between a battery cell and a detection unit. Thus, an electrical connector is manufactured, for example, from electrically conductive wires, wherein the wires must have an exact length and a curvature. Each electrical connector is welded or adhesively bonded to at least one battery cell and one detection unit. The electrically conductive wires are subsequently collected together to form a wiring harness.
The method according to the invention has in contrast the advantage that the electrically conductive connection comprises at least one bonding wire and/or one bonding strip in order to produce an electrically conductive connection between at least one battery cell and a connecting means.
Aluminum, aluminum-silicon, copper or gold are advantageously used as the material for the bonding wire and/or the bonding strip in order to reduce conduction losses.
When using a bonding strip, it is an advantage that less damage occurs to the contacting surfaces, such as, for example, cracks on the contacting surfaces resulting from the bonding wire being to greatly bent. It is therefore possible to bridge the same distance with a bonding strip that is shorter in comparison to a bonding wire.
In the case of an electrically conductive connection which comprises more than one bonding wire and/or more than one bonding strip, contacting surfaces of the bonding wires and/or the bonding strips are advantageously disposed adjacently on a cell contact of the battery cell or, respectively, on the connecting means and/or on top of one another on the cell contact of the battery cell or on the connecting means.
The connecting means advantageously comprises a conductor plate, at least one conductor path and/or a plug, whereby a smaller installation space is required.
In order to produce an electrically conductive connection between the bonding wire and/or the bonding strip and a cell contact of the battery cell or, respectively, the connecting means, various attachment techniques are used, such as thermocompression bonding (TC bonding), thermosonic ball-wedge bonding (TS bonding) and/or an ultrasonic wedge-wedge bonding (US bonding).
These techniques are selected, for example, on the basis of a material of the bonding wires or the bonding strip used. Hence, the TC bonding is seldom used for bonding wires because this technique can lead to damage to the connecting elements due to the high forces and temperatures required to produce the connection, whereas the technique is however suited to a bonding of bonding strips. If gold or copper is used as the material for the bonding wires or bonding strips, the TS bonding is then a very suitable technique. If, on the other hand, aluminum or aluminum-silicon is used as the material for the bonding wires or bonding strips, the US bonding is advantageously used as the attachment technique.
A disposal of the battery cells that is optimized to the installation space is advantageously possible due to the smaller space requirement of the bonding wires and/or the bonding strips in comparison to the wiring harnesses used to date.
A new geometry and/or a new configuration of battery cells due to the mechanical flexibility of the bonding wires and/or the bonding strips as electrical connectors is advantageously possible. New geometries can advantageously be implemented using the bonding wires and/or bonding strips with a small amount of modification to the bonding machines.
By the use of the bonding wires and/or bonding strips, a production-related height difference, which results in an optimal cooling for an arrangement of battery cells at the bottom of the battery module, is advantageously compensated.
Weight is advantageously saved by each bonding wire and/or bonding strip due to a reduced material requirement in comparison to conventional wires, whereby a range of a vehicle is extended.
A heat transmission advantageously takes place by means of the bonding wires and/or the bonding strips; thus enabling at least one temperature sensor integrated into the connecting means or a temperature sensor disposed on the connecting means to detect a temperature of at least one battery cell by means of the bonding wires and/or bonding strips and to transmit the temperature to a cell monitoring unit. As a result, a sensor on the cell connector and/or in the cell monitoring unit is saved.
A sensor disposed on the connecting means is advantageously electrically contacted to said connecting means by means of at least one bonding wire and/or at least one bonding strip.
When comparing an application of bonding wires and/or bonding strips with an application of cell connectors according to the prior art, a repair of defective electrical connections between the cell contact and the connecting means is advantageously possible with comparatively low cost and effort. In order to repair a defective electrical connection, at least one new bonding wire and/or a new bonding strip is electrically contacted by means of bonding to a cell contact and to the connecting means, wherein contacting surfaces on the cell contact and the connecting means are advantageously sufficiently present due to the smaller cross sections of the bonding wires and/or bonding strips.
In an advantageous manner, a failure probability dependent on electrical and mechanical influences is reduced by a contacting of redundant bonding wires and/or bonding strips, for example by means of at least one further bonding strip between the cell contact and the connecting means.
In an advantageous manner, fewer manufacturing steps for contacting battery cells and the connecting means are required as a result of the bonding wires and/or bonding strips, whereby a reduced technical outlay for a manufacturing process of battery modules is required and a higher degree of automation is facilitated.
The battery module is advantageously used in a lithium-ion battery.
Exemplary embodiments of the invention are depicted in the drawings and explained in detail in the following description.
In the drawings:
Identical reference signs denote identical components of the device in all of the figures of the drawings.
The electrical cell connector 13(4) comprises a first connecting element 13(4a), a second connecting element 13(4c), as well as a curved connecting element 13(4b) which electrically connects the first connecting element 13(4a) to the second connecting element 13(4c). In order to establish an electrically conductive connection and mechanical connection between the cell contact 11(1) and the cell contact of a further battery cell by means of the cell connector 13(1), the cell connector 13(1) has, for example, a recess 13(1d).
The electrical cell connector 13(4) can be manufactured from a single piece or can be assembled from various electrically conductive materials. Tolerances of the battery cells and independent movements of the cells can be compensated by the curved connecting element 13(4b).
The electrical cell connector 13(4) is welded, adhesively bonded or clamped to the battery cells 10(3), 10(4).
A cell monitoring unit 15 is connected to the cell contacts 12(1), 12(2), 12(3), 12(4) of the battery cells 10(1), 10(2), 10(3), 10(4) by means of electrical connectors 16(1), 16(2), 16(3), 16(4), for example electrically conductive wires.
In an advantageous embodiment, the electrically conductive connection comprises a single bonding wire 23(3) comprising a first contacting surface 23(3a) on a first cell contact 12(3) and a second contacting surface 23(3b) on the connecting means 22.
In an alternative embodiment, the electrically conductive connection comprises at least two bonding wires 23(4).
In a further alternative embodiment, the electrically conductive connection comprises the bonding strip 23(1) comprising a first contacting surface 23(1a) on a first cell contact 12(1) and a second contacting surface 23(1b) on the connecting means 22.
In an alternative embodiment, the second contacting surface 23(3b) is disposed on a conductor path, wherein the conductor path is on or in the connecting means and is electrically connected to a cell monitoring unit 15.
An electrically conductive connection between the cell contact 11(1) and a cell contact of a further battery cell is established by means of the cell connector 13(1).
Aluminum, aluminum-silicon, copper or gold are used as the material for the at least one bonding wire and the at least one bonding strip.
In an advantageous manner, the diameter of the bonding wire is between 10 μm and 100 μm; thus enabling a current flow between 0.3 A and 0.5 A to be ensured without the bonding wire being damaged, for example as a result of the effect of heat.
The width of the bonding strip is advantageously between 30 μm and 500 μm and the height of the bonding strip between 10 μm and 200 μm. In so doing, three bonding wires having a diameter of 100 μm can be replaced by one bonding strip.
The length of the bonding wire and/or the bonding strip is advantageously between 10 mm and 50 mm in order to achieve a sufficient mechanical stability between two contacting surfaces 20(1a), 20(1b) or 21(a), 21(b).
The cell monitoring unit 15 measures voltages of individual battery cells by means of the electrically conductive connection between the cell contacts 12(1), 12(2), 12(3), 12(4), the connecting means 22 and the cell monitoring unit 15, for example with the use of a voltage sensor. In addition, the cell monitoring unit can comprise a current sensor, a temperature sensor and/or resistors, for example for carrying out a balancing procedure on the battery cells.
In an alternative embodiment, the electrical cell connectors 13(1), 13(2), 13(3), 13(4) comprise wires, bonding wires and/or bonding strips for an electrically conductive connection between the cell contacts 11(1), 11(2), 11(3), 11(4), 12(1), 12(2), 12(3), 12(4).
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2013 213 524.6 | Jul 2013 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2014/063202 | 6/24/2014 | WO | 00 |