The present disclosure claims the benefit of priority of co-pending European Patent Application No. 21186240.4, filed on Jul. 16, 2021, and entitled “Structural Battery for an Electric Vehicle Comprising a Battery Cell Support Matrix,” the contents of which are incorporated in full by reference herein.
The present disclosure relates to an electric vehicle including a battery assembly with at least two rows of battery cells attached to a battery frame structure. The present disclosure also relates to a battery pack for use in such an electric vehicle and to a method of manufacturing such a battery assembly.
Electrical vehicles (also known as Battery Electric Vehicles, BEVs in short) use a battery pack to provide electricity to the drive train/motor(s). To provide enough range with current cell technology, in line with customer expectations coming from a fossil fuel car, a BEV battery is located underneath the passenger compartment, basically under the floor. The overall design complexity involves maximizing cell volume (range) into a given footprint (area/volume) provided by the car setup, to the lowest weight possible (range/environmental impact) while also maximizing highly important attributes such as crash safety and vehicle stiffness (NVH and driver experience).
Up until recently a battery electric vehicle pack has been as a standalone unit with main function of being a safety cage for cells and modules preventing intrusion causing catastrophic failure, while also protecting the sensitive electronics inside from the outside environment. This thinking has led to double structures; Battery and body of the vehicle. Having double structures with the necessary gaps to allow for tolerances and general occupies a volume that could have otherwise been used for integrating more cell volume, further increasing range, had the two systems been seen and engineered as one system. Current art is compensating for this lower volumetric efficiency by using a larger footprint, leading to a shorter stopping distance (in longitudinal and lateral direction) between frame structure and cell footprint. An increasing size of the vehicle results in in increased energy content.
It is known to provide structural batteries in which the battery casing forms the bottom of the vehicle body and the traditional front floor is removed. The arrays of battery cells are kept in place inside the casing of the battery pack by means of a resin.
It is an object of the present disclosure to provide an electric vehicle with a battery pack having an improved volumetric efficiency and forming a structural part of the vehicle body. It is another object of the present disclosure to provide a relatively compact structural battery pack for which the number of components are reduced and that can be manufactured in an efficiently manner. It is another object of the present disclosure to provide a battery pack that is provided with an impact absorption zone by which the battery cells are protected from forces arising upon impact.
An electric vehicle according to the present disclosure includes a battery frame structure with a number of accommodating cavities, arranged in a matrix, each battery cell being placed in a respective accommodating cavity and connected to adjacent walls of the respective accommodating cavity via a flowable bonding substance being inserted between the cells and the walls of the respective cavity.
The battery cells are accurately and firmly positioned in the matrix structure of the preformed accommodating cavities. Because the cells are interconnected by being firmly bonded to the walls of the cavities, the number of internal fastener members that are required to keep the cells in place, such as end plates, bolt fixations, tension straps etc., can be reduced. This allows the entire cell foot print to shrink in XY plane, compared to a modular design equivalent.
The interconnected cells in the matrix of the accommodating cavities form, after curing of the bonding substance, a rigid and integral brick of cells that can be easily handled and that can be accurately placed in the required position relative to a frame or tray of the battery pack and relative to frame parts of the electric vehicle.
The battery frame structure may include longitudinal and transverse side walls. The sidewalls and the walls of the accommodating cavities can be formed by injection molding, casting or additive manufacturing.
The battery frame structure is first formed from the flowable first material that is cured to harden into a solid and rigid matrix. Next, the individual battery cells are inserted into respective cavities and the space between the battery cells and the matrix of cavities is filled with the bonding substance. After curing of the bonding substance, the cells are tightly held in place and a strong and stiff interconnected battery structure is formed, which allows to down-gauge on other frame parts of the car body such as sub frames, brakes or suspension. Once the cells are bonded, a unitary composite block is formed with large torsional stiffness and structural strength of the matrix of embedded cells. If for instance a weight of the bonded cells is around 450 kg, 200 kg of weight saving of peripheral structure parts could be achieved such that an overall weight increase of 250 kg ensues, in which the bonded cells can be considered as “negative mass”.
In an embodiment, the accommodating cavities are of substantially the same height as a height of the battery cells, a bottom surface of the battery frame structure being substantially flat and supporting a thermally conductive layer contacting the bottom of each battery cell, a top surface of the battery frame structure being placed in a contacting relationship with a top cover. The bottom layer may be formed of a thermal interface material (TIM) for heat transfer from the cells to a bottom cooling plate. The top cover may be formed of an adhesive material and may connect to a top plate forming a shear plane for distribution of lateral forces to the matrix of embedded battery cells.
The battery frame structure may be placed in a tray member including two longitudinal side profiles that are interconnected via a front and rear transverse beam, longitudinal side walls of the battery frame structure extending at a distance from the longitudinal side members, a compressible filler member being placed between the longitudinal side walls of the battery frame structure and the adjacent longitudinal side profile.
The battery frame structure provides a rigid battery pack with small lateral dimensions. By leaving the space between the side of the cell battery frame structure and the sill members free and not increasing the width of the battery pack, a weight saving is achieved as other parts of the vehicle (suspension, brakes, chassis, wheels) can be made of lighter weight. Also, the deformable material between the cells and the sill members isolates the cells from impact and provide increased safety against intrusion and catastrophic thermal runaway upon side impact.
A top plate and a bottom plate can be placed in contact with a top and a bottom plane of the battery frame structure, forming a casing, the top and bottom plates being attached to the longitudinal profiles, forming a battery pack. The battery pack can be bolted and/or bonded to the vehicle frame members in an easy to handle manner.
In an embodiment, the bottom plate includes a number of cooling channels extending in a length direction, the cooling channels being connected to a cooling fluid inlet at a first transverse beam and being connected to a cooling fluid outlet manifold at a second transverse beam.
The bottom plate can be covered by an insulating layer that forms the external bottom layer of the vehicle.
The front and the rear transverse walls of the battery frame structure may be contacting a respective parallel metal end plate that is rigidly connected to the transverse beams. The end plates restrain the forces in the longitudinal direction, caused by swelling of the battery cells upon ageing, which forces may in an example amount to 10-30 kN.
The front end plate in one embodiment includes a centrally placed force absorption member, preferably formed by extrusion, having an number of compartments. The absorption member provides a very stiff anchoring point with minimal material use and transfers the forces upon frontal impact into the bonded cell and sandwich structure, where it is distributed into the bonded shear planes spreading the load and keeping cell intrusions within safe limits.
A method of manufacturing a battery assembly for an electric vehicle, including:
forming a battery frame structure having longitudinal and transverse sidewalls and including a number of accommodating cavities by injection molding, casting or additive manufacturing,
inserting battery cells into the accommodating cavities, the height of the cavities substantially corresponding to the height of the battery members, and
filling up a space between the battery cells and the walls of the respective cavity with a bonding material and connecting each battery cell to the walls of the respective cell via the bonding material, forming a unitary cell block.
The method may include:
placing the unitary cell block formed of the interconnected battery cells in a tray member including two longitudinal side profiles that are interconnected via a front and rear transverse beam, the longitudinal side walls of the battery frame structure extending at a distance from the longitudinal side profiles,
inserting a deformable member between the longitudinal side walls of the battery frame structure and the adjacent longitudinal side profile,
placing a top plate and a bottom plate on the upper and lower surfaces of the battery frame structure, forming a casing, and
attaching the casing to a vehicle frame part.
Embodiments of a battery assembly according to the disclosure will, by way of non-limiting example, be explained in detail with reference to the accompanying drawings. In the drawings:
As shown in
A replaceable insulation layer 53 can be provided over the cooling plate 18 to form the outer layer of the vehicle. The thermal isolation provided by the layer 53 mitigates the wind chill factor of the battery pack 9 by the environment and prevents uncontrolled heat transfer. In case the insulation layer 53 gets damaged, for instance in case of a de-road accident, it can be easily removed, inspected and serviced or replaced.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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21186240.4 | Jul 2021 | EP | regional |