This invention relates generally to a cooling fin to enable series cooling of individual battery cells and battery modules within a battery pack, and more particularly to using such a cooling fin without introducing large temperature differences or pressure drops.
Lithium-ion and related batteries, collectively known as a rechargeable energy storage system (RESS), are being used in automotive applications as a way to supplement, in the case of hybrid electric vehicles (HEVs), or supplant, in the case of purely electric vehicles (EVs), conventional internal combustion engines (ICEs). The ability to passively store energy from stationary and portable sources, as well as from recaptured kinetic energy provided by the vehicle and its components, makes batteries ideal to serve as part of a propulsion system for cars, trucks, buses, motorcycles and related vehicular platforms. In the present context, a cell is a single electrochemical unit, whereas a battery is made up of one or more cells joined in series, parallel or both, depending on desired output voltage, current or capacity.
Temperature is one of the most significant factors impacting both the performance and life of a battery. Prolonged exposure to high temperature may lead to premature aging, accelerated capacity fade and other undesirable cell conditions. Forced air and liquid cooling may prove to be effective at avoiding such excessive heat buildup in and around the individual cells that make up a larger battery pack, but in so doing may exacerbate excessive temperature differential between cells within the same module, section or pack where—for example—it is desirable to keep temperature differences between adjacent cells relatively small, often to no more than about 5° C. Furthermore, while parallel-based cooling systems typically are able to avoid significant temperature differentials (due in part to there being an equal chance for the cooling fluid to travel in each parallel path) of the overall system, they could be susceptible to more complex ducting in order to provide the necessary even flow distribution.
It is important for proper operation of a battery-based power system to keep operating voltages of the individual cells that make up the battery relatively close to one another. Likewise, because cell voltage drop is a function of resistance, and resistance is a function of temperature, it is desirable to keep the temperature of the cells close to one another in order to preserve this relative commonality of individual cell voltages. To this end, as well as to achieve a desirable balance between battery life and performance, the present inventors have determined that only small temperature variations between cells should be permitted. In one exemplary form based on current battery state-of-the-art, such differences should be (as mentioned above) kept to no more than about 5° Celsius, although subsequent improvements in cell technology may permit slightly larger disparities. Furthermore, the present inventors have determined that certain types of batteries—such as Li-ion batteries—operate best at temperatures between about 25° Celsius and about 40° Celsius. The cooling configuration of the present disclosure can be designed for a specific operating temperature that satisfies these requirements. As such, a battery cooling system based on the use of particularly-configured cooling fins can help maintain optimal operating temperatures and temperature uniformity of the cells within a battery under normal operating conditions, including minimizing heat differentials between neighboring cells. In both circumstances, this helps to mitigate thermal propagation and the related potential to damage additional components.
According to one aspect of the invention, a cooling system for a battery pack, section, module or related plurality of battery cells is disclosed. The battery includes two or more battery cells configured to deliver electric current, and the cooling system includes a cooling fin placed in thermal communication with the one or more of the various individual battery cells. The number of battery cells within the larger battery module, section, pack or related structure will be appreciated by those skilled in the art to coincide with the power needs of the device receiving electric current from the battery, as well as the thermal operating requirements of the cells within the battery.
As discussed above, battery packs are made up of sections which may be made up of numerous battery modules each of which is in turn made up of one or more battery cells that deliver electrical current to a load. One such non-limiting example of a load includes the equipment used to provide motive power to the powertrain of an automobile, as well as other auxiliary applications associated with operating the vehicle. In the present context, the term “motive power” describes a battery pack capable of providing more than mere starting power for another power source (such as an internal combustion engine); it includes battery packs capable of providing sustained power sufficient to propel a vehicle in a manner consistent with that for which it was designed. It will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that such batteries may also store energy recaptured from kinetic energy, such as regenerative braking or excess energy from an ICE. In one form, the current generated by the battery pack may be used to run one or more electric motors that in turn may be used to turn one or more wheels. Other members (for example, structural members) are placed in thermal communication with the battery cell to enable heat exchange between them.
According to another aspect of the invention, a propulsion system for an automobile is disclosed. The propulsion system includes one or more battery modules each of which is made up of one or more battery cells where an electrochemical reaction takes place, as well as a cooling fin placed in thermal communication with the battery cell or cells. The cooling fin includes a surface onto which (or into which) one or more coolant flow-paths may be formed, including a laminar portion and a turbulent portion. Depending on which (and how many) of the cells each cooling fin can provide face-to-face heat exchange with, the size and location of the cooling surface (also referred to as cooling fin surface) dedicated to the laminar and turbulent portions can be varied.
According to yet another aspect of the invention, a method of controlling temperature in an automobile propulsion system is disclosed. The method includes configuring the propulsion system to derive at least a portion of its motive power from one or more battery cells (which may in turn make up the successively larger units of a battery module and a battery pack), arranging a cooling fin to be in thermal communication with the battery cell, and transferring at least a portion of the heat contained within the at least one battery cell to the cooling fin. As with the previous aspects, the presence of laminar and turbulent portions (as well as their fractions of overall cooling fin surface area) is designed to coincide with the needs of the cells being cooled.
The following detailed description of the preferred embodiments of the present invention can be best understood when read in conjunction with the following drawings, where like structure is indicated with like reference numerals and in which:
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A bulkhead 4 may define a primary support structure that can function as an interface for the coolant hoses 3, as well as house a battery disconnect unit in the event battery service is required. In addition to providing support for the numerous battery modules 15, tray 2 and bulkhead 4 may support other modules, such as a voltage, current and temperature measuring module 5. Placement of individual battery cells 100 (to be discussed in more detail below) within one of battery modules 15 is shown, as is the covering thereof by a voltage and temperature sub-module 6 in the form of plug connections, busbars, fuses or the like. Although shown notionally in a T-shaped configuration, it will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that battery pack 1 may be formed into other suitable configurations as well. Likewise, battery pack 1 may include—in an exemplary configuration—between about two hundred and three hundred individual battery cells 100, although (like the arrangement) the number of cells 100 may be greater or fewer, depending on the power needs of the vehicle. In one exemplary form, battery pack 1 is made up of three sections a first of which consists of two modules 10 with thirty six cells 100 in each module 15 to make a seventy two cell section located along the vehicular longitudinal axis of the T-shaped battery pack 1, a second of which consists of two modules 15 with thirty six cells 100 in each module 10 and one module with eighteen cells 100 to make a ninety cell section (also located along the vehicular longitudinal axis) and a third (located on the vehicular lateral axis of the T-shaped battery pack 1) made up of three modules 10 with thirty six cells 100 in each module 15 and one module with eighteen cells 100 to make a one hundred and twenty six cell section for a total of two hundred and eighty eight such cells. Other features, such as manual service disconnect 7, insulation 8 and a cover 9 complete the battery pack 1. In addition to the aforementioned battery disconnect unit, other power electronic components (not shown) may be used, including a battery management system or related controllers. The number of cells mentioned above in conjunction with battery pack 10 are meant to be exemplary; in one preferred form, a battery cell-based power system could employ a fewer number or a greater number of such cells; for example such a system may contain between about a dozen and two hundred of such cells.
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With regard to the laminar portion 214, it is preferable to keep the air (or related coolant) C laminar and insulated while passing over the hotter first cell 100A in order to keep the heat exchange between the cell 100A and its adjacent cooling fin 210A relatively low. Numerous individual turbulators 216 may be formed on the part of surface S that defines the turbulent portion 214, and their spacing and size may be used to provide a tunable amount of flow disruption. In one form, this tunable feature may be made to occur across the face of the cooling fin 210 to help manage temperature from the bottom to top. In the present context, a turbulator—while shown as a semicircular bump—is any device that by its protrusion into the flow stream turns laminar flow into turbulent flow. As will be apparent from the discussion herein, such enhancement of turbulent flow helps to promote the exchange of heat between the various cells 100A, 100B and the coolant C that flows across the companion cooling fins 210A, 210B. This enhanced heat exchange in turn can be used to maximize cooling efficiency in strategic areas in order to promote better temperature uniformity among the various individual battery cells 100 by having the ratio between the laminar portion 212 and a turbulent portion 214 of the first-encountered cooling fin 210A be different from the ratio of the cooling fin 210B that later encounters the coolant C. In one form, the enhanced heat exchange between the second cell 100B and the adjacent cooling fin 210B can be quantified as heat rejection per degree inlet temperature differential; such a value may be used to provide tunable levels of heat removal from the various cells 100. Thus, with some knowledge about the cell 100 and its heat generation, the series cooling system of the present invention can be used to tune the amount of heat carried away from each series cell 100 to control the temperature differential from the first series cell 100A to the next series cell 100B and each subsequent cell in the series, all the way up to the last one in the group or related unit of cells 100. Although the latter cooling fin 210B is shown with a substantial majority of its surface S covered with turbulators 216, it will be appreciated that the number and surface S coverage can be tuned (i.e., made greater or fewer in number, size or related surface coverage), depending on the expected temperature difference across the adjacent cells 100A, 100B. Furthermore, the proximity of the placement of the turbulators 216 to the positive and negative electrodes or tabs 102 and 104 is such that the area defined by the turbulator 216 array may be adjacent the hottest part of the cell 100A as a way to best remove the most heat. It is likewise within the scope of the present invention to have the turbulators 216 be opposite of the positive and negative electrodes or tabs 102 and 104; in either event, the ability to configure such turbulator 216 placement d for each cell geometry is within the scope of the present invention.
In one form, the coolant C can be made to flow across a substantial entirety of each of the cells 100A, 100B such that a substantial entirety of incoming coolant Cin, is also discharged at the outlet Cout (which collectively define a coolant flow-path), while in another form, some of the coolant C may be exhausted Cexh through an exhaust path 217 (also referred to herein as an intermediate exhaust path to emphasize its removal of excess heat as a way to reduce the chances of the downstream cell 100B from being exposed) fluidly disposed between the side-by-side cells 100A, 100B prior to encountering the cooling channel portion that is adjacent the second cell. This feature allows the heated coolant C to be exhausted in order to not contaminate the cool air in a manner generally similar to that of the “saved” or preserved air discussed above in conjunction with the insulator plate. As such, the placement of the exhaust path 217 along the coolant flow-path between the first and second of the battery cells 100A, 100B such that at least a portion of heat transferred from the first battery cell 100A to the coolant C is exhausted to prevent the contained in the coolant C from being delivered to the second battery cell 100B. In yet another form, it can be passed along a small diversional pathway in the form of a discreet channel 219 along the top of second cell as not impact the temperature of the second cell temperature. Exhaust path 217 may also be tuned (by, for example, adjusting the cross-sectional area or tortuous nature of its flow-path) to remove a certain fraction of the overall coolant flow, as can discreet channel 219 formed along the flow-path direction of the later-encountered cooling fin 214. In one form, the discreet channel 219 may be placed along an upper edge (as shown) of the later-encountered cooling fin 210B or elsewhere, depending on the need. In a particular form, the air that is adjacent the turbulators 216 in turbulent portion 214 of the first-encountered cooling fin 210A is hot relative to the more laminar flows in the laminar portion 212; by helping to route this hotter air away from the subsequently-encountered cooling fin 210B through the use of one or both of exhaust path 217 and discreet channel 219, the likelihood of undue heating of cell 100B is reduced.
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One benefit of the present invention is its ability to maximize efficiency of a fan, compressor, blower or related flow-enhancing device while minimizing temperature differences between the first cell and the subsequent cell or cells. Such efficiency improvements may come about as a result of using one fin 210 to cool two cells 100A, 100B, which helps eliminate or reduce the size of the ducting used to carry the coolant C. This duct reduction in turn helps increase battery cell 100 packaging density, as well as permit simplified control by promoting a substantial increase in the uniformity of cell 100 temperatures with battery pack 10. Furthermore, overall component and manufacturing costs may be reduced by having reduced number of cooling fins 210.
It is noted that terms like “preferably”, “commonly” and “typically” are not utilized herein to limit the scope of the claimed invention or to imply that certain features are critical, essential, or even important to the structure or function of the claimed invention. Rather, these terms are merely intended to highlight alternative or additional features that may or may not be utilized in a particular embodiment of the present invention. Likewise, terms such as “substantially” are utilized to represent the inherent degree of uncertainty that may be attributed to any quantitative comparison, value, measurement or other representation. It is also utilized to represent the degree by which a quantitative representation may vary from a stated reference without resulting in a change in the basic function of the subject matter at issue.
For the purposes of describing and defining the present invention it is noted that the term “device” is utilized herein to represent a combination of components and individual components, regardless of whether the components are combined with other components. For example, a device according to the present invention may comprise a source of motive power, a vehicle incorporating the source of motive power or other equipment that may make up, or be used in conjunction with, the vehicle or source of motive power. Furthermore, variations on the terms “automobile”, “automotive”, “vehicular” or the like are meant to be construed generically unless the context dictates otherwise. As such, reference to an automobile will be understood to cover cars, trucks, buses, motorcycles and other similar modes of transportation unless more particularly recited in context.
Having described the invention in detail and by reference to specific embodiments thereof, it will be apparent that modifications and variations are possible without departing from the scope of the invention defined in the appended claims. More specifically, although some aspects of the present invention are identified herein as preferred or particularly advantageous, it is contemplated that the present invention is not necessarily limited to these preferred aspects of the invention.