Claims
- 1. A hybrid electric vehicle drive system comprising:
a combustion engine, an electric motor, and at least one nickel metal hydride battery module providing electric power to said electric motor, said at least one battery module having a peak power density in relation to energy density as defined by:P>1,420−16E where P is the peak power density as measured in Watts/kilogram and E is the energy density as measured in Watts-hours/kilogram.
- 2. The drive system of claim 1 including means for connecting and disconnecting said combusion engine and said electric motor in driving relationship to said electric vehicle.
- 3. The drive system of claim 2 including control means for operating said battery module in a charge depleting mode.
- 4. The drive system of claim 2 including control means for operating said battery power module in a charge sustaining mode.
- 5. The drive system of claim 1 wherein said peak power denisty is at least 600 W/Kg for an energy density of at least 70 Wh/Kg.
- 6. The drive system of claim 1 wherein said peak power density is at least 550 W/Kg for an energy density of at least 55 Wh/Kg.
- 7. The drive system of claim 1 wherein said peak power density is at least 600 W/Kg for an energy density of at least 50 Wh/Kg.
- 8. The drive system of claim 1 wherein said battery module comprises comprises electrodes of high electrical conductivity.
- 9. The drive system of claim 8, wherein said high electrical conductivity electrodes are formed substantially of copper.
- 10. A hybrid electric vehicle incorporating an integrated propulsion system, comprising:
a power system comprising a combustion engine and an electric motor; at least one nickel-metal hydride battery module coupled to said power system, said battery module configured for maximum peak power density and high energy density, said battery module comprising a plurality of nickel-metal hydride batteries; and power controlling means governing said power system and configured for optimum operation of said combustion engine and said electric motor.
- 11. The hybrid electric vehicle of claim 10 further comprising:
a regenerative braking system coupled to said power controlling means and providing charging current for said nickel-metal hydride batteries.
- 12. The hybrid electric vehicle of claim 10, wherein each of said nickel-metal hydride batteries has at least one negative electrode, said negative electrode including a porous metal substrate comprising a material selected from the group consisting of copper, copper alloy, nickel coated with copper, and nickel coated with copper alloy.
- 13. The hybrid electric vehicle of claim 10, wherein said battery module has a volumetric peak power density greater than or equal to 1500 W/L.
- 14. The hybrid electric vehicle of claim 10, wherein said battery module has a specific peak power density greater than 600 W/Kg at an energy density of at least 70 Wh/Kg.
- 15. The hybrid electric vehicle of claim 10, wherein said battery module has a volumetric energy density greater than or equal to 150 Wh/L.
- 16. The integrated propulsion system of claim 12, wherein said negative electrode includes an electrode tab, said electrode tab directly attached to said porous metal substrate via a low electrical-resistance connection.
- 17. The hybrid electric vehicle of claim 16, wherein said low electrical-resistance connection is formed by welding, brazing or soldering.
- 18. The hybrid electric vehicle of claim 12, wherein said negative electrodes are sintered negative electrodes formed from Ovonic alloys.
- 19. The hybrid electric vehicle of claim 18, where said Ovonic alloys comprise the composition:
- 20. The hybrid electric vehicle of claim 12, wherein each of said nickel-metal hydride batteries includes at least one positive electrode, said positive electrode comprising an active material comprising a disordered y-phase positive electrode material.
- 21. The hybrid electric vehicle of claim 12, wherein said porous metal substrate is fabricated with current collection lines having electrical conductivity greater than said porous metal substrate, said current collection lines providing high conductivity pathways from points remote from said at least one electrode tab on said negative and positive electrodes.
- 22. The hybrid electric vehicle of claim 21, wherein all connections between said porous metal substrate, said current collection lines, said at least one electrode tab are laser welded.
- 23. The hybrid electric vehicle of claim 12, wherein said positive electrodes further comprise current conducting additives added to said powered active material of said positive electrodes, said current conductive additives chosen from the group consisting of nickel particles, nickel fibers, graphite particles, nickel plated graphite particles, nickel plated copper particles, nickel plated copper fibers, nickel flakes, and nickel plated copper flakes.
- 24. The hybrid electric vehicle of claim 10, wherein said nickel metal hydride batteries are low pressure nickel metal hydride electrochemical cells comprising:
a negative electrode comprising a metal hydride active material; a positive electrode comprising a nickel hydroxide active material; and a reduced thickness separator positioned around said negative electrode and around said positive electrode, said separator comprising a material selected from the group consisting of nylon, and grafted polyethylene.
- 25. The hybrid electric vehicle of claim 24, wherein said negative electrode or the surface of said reduced thickness separator facing said negative electrode has a uniform distribution of hydrophobic material to increase gas recombination and reduce cell pressure.
- 26. The hybrid electric vehicle of claim 21, where said hydrophobic material comprises a 1% aqueous solution of polytetrafluoroethylene.
- 27. The hybrid electric vehicle of claim 10, further comprising a fluid cooled battery-pack system, said system comprising:
a battery-pack case including at least one coolant inlet means and at least one coolant outlet means, said at least one battery module disposed within said case such that said module is spacedly disposed from said case and from any other module disposed within said case to form coolant flow channels along at least one surface of said module, the width of said coolant flow channels sized to provide maximum heat transfer from said module to said coolant; and at least one coolant transport means, said coolant transport means causing said coolant to enter said coolant inlet means of said case, to flow through said coolant flow channels and to exit said coolant outlet means of said case.
- 28. The hybrid electric vehicle of claim 27, where said coolant transport means includes a forced-air blower.
- 29. The hybrid electric vehicle of claim 27, where said coolant flows perpendicular to the longest dimension of said coolant flow channels.
- 30. The hybrid electric vehicle of claim 27, where said coolant flows parallel to the longest dimension of said coolant flow channels.
- 31. The hybrid electric vehicle of claim 27, where said coolant flow channels are designed to impede the flow of coolant flowing therethrough by no more that about 5 to 30% in flow volume.
- 32. The hybrid electric vehicle of claim 27, where the width of said coolant flow channels is between 0.3 and 12 mm.
- 33. The hybrid electric vehicle of claim 27, where said system maintains the temperature of said battery modules below 65° C.
- 34. The hybrid electric vehicle of claim 27, where said system maintains the temperature difference between battery modules below 8° C.
RELATED APPLICATION INFORMATION
[0001] The present invention is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/979,340 filed on Nov. 24, 1997 which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. Nos. 08/792,358 and 08/792,359, both filed 31 January 1997. U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/979,340 is hereby incorporated by reference herein.
Continuations (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
08979340 |
Nov 1997 |
US |
Child |
10016203 |
Dec 2001 |
US |
Continuation in Parts (2)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
08792358 |
Jan 1997 |
US |
Child |
08979340 |
Nov 1997 |
US |
Parent |
08792359 |
Jan 1997 |
US |
Child |
08979340 |
Nov 1997 |
US |