Analysing and evaluating a thermal management solution via heat pipes for lithium-ion batteries in electric vehicles

Thermal management is crucial in many engineering applications because it affects the electrical, material, and other properties of the system. A recent study focuses on the use of heat pipes for battery thermal management in electric vehicles, which explores a new area for heat pipe applications....

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Main Author: Wang, Qian
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/29358/
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author Wang, Qian
author_facet Wang, Qian
author_sort Wang, Qian
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Thermal management is crucial in many engineering applications because it affects the electrical, material, and other properties of the system. A recent study focuses on the use of heat pipes for battery thermal management in electric vehicles, which explores a new area for heat pipe applications. The battery, as one and only energy source in an EV, establishes a vital barrier for automotive industry because it can make the car more expensive and less reliable. The modelling methodology developed in this thesis is a one-dimensional electrochemical model, decoupled and coupled with a three-dimensional flow and heat transfer model. A prototype for 2-cell prismatic battery cooling and preheating using heat pipes is developed, and a full experimental characterisation has been performed. The experimental results characterised system thermal performance as well as validating material properties/parameters for simulation inputs. Two surrogate cells filled with atonal 324 were used in this experiment. The eligibility of substituting atonal 324 for lithium-ion battery electrolytes has been assessed and confirmed. The consistency demonstrated between the finite element analysis and the experiment facilitates BTM simulation at pack level, which is a scale-up model containing 30 lithium-ion batteries. The study shows that heat pipes can be very beneficial to reduce thermal stress on batteries leading to thermally homogenous packs. Additionally, an attempt of integrating biomimetic wicks for ultra-thin flat plate heat pipes is made in response to space limitations in microelectronics cooling. To date, no one has devised an ultra-thin FPHP with enough vapour space by constructing different wicks for each heat pipe segment, especially under anti-gravity condition. It is thus interesting to see whether a new type of wick structure can be made to achieve an optimum heat transfer potential.
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format Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
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institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
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language English
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publishDate 2015
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spelling nottingham-293582025-02-28T11:35:57Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/29358/ Analysing and evaluating a thermal management solution via heat pipes for lithium-ion batteries in electric vehicles Wang, Qian Thermal management is crucial in many engineering applications because it affects the electrical, material, and other properties of the system. A recent study focuses on the use of heat pipes for battery thermal management in electric vehicles, which explores a new area for heat pipe applications. The battery, as one and only energy source in an EV, establishes a vital barrier for automotive industry because it can make the car more expensive and less reliable. The modelling methodology developed in this thesis is a one-dimensional electrochemical model, decoupled and coupled with a three-dimensional flow and heat transfer model. A prototype for 2-cell prismatic battery cooling and preheating using heat pipes is developed, and a full experimental characterisation has been performed. The experimental results characterised system thermal performance as well as validating material properties/parameters for simulation inputs. Two surrogate cells filled with atonal 324 were used in this experiment. The eligibility of substituting atonal 324 for lithium-ion battery electrolytes has been assessed and confirmed. The consistency demonstrated between the finite element analysis and the experiment facilitates BTM simulation at pack level, which is a scale-up model containing 30 lithium-ion batteries. The study shows that heat pipes can be very beneficial to reduce thermal stress on batteries leading to thermally homogenous packs. Additionally, an attempt of integrating biomimetic wicks for ultra-thin flat plate heat pipes is made in response to space limitations in microelectronics cooling. To date, no one has devised an ultra-thin FPHP with enough vapour space by constructing different wicks for each heat pipe segment, especially under anti-gravity condition. It is thus interesting to see whether a new type of wick structure can be made to achieve an optimum heat transfer potential. 2015-07-16 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/29358/1/PhD%20Thesis_FULL_single%20sided.pdf Wang, Qian (2015) Analysing and evaluating a thermal management solution via heat pipes for lithium-ion batteries in electric vehicles. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. battery thermal management heat pipe EV
spellingShingle battery thermal management
heat pipe
EV
Wang, Qian
Analysing and evaluating a thermal management solution via heat pipes for lithium-ion batteries in electric vehicles
title Analysing and evaluating a thermal management solution via heat pipes for lithium-ion batteries in electric vehicles
title_full Analysing and evaluating a thermal management solution via heat pipes for lithium-ion batteries in electric vehicles
title_fullStr Analysing and evaluating a thermal management solution via heat pipes for lithium-ion batteries in electric vehicles
title_full_unstemmed Analysing and evaluating a thermal management solution via heat pipes for lithium-ion batteries in electric vehicles
title_short Analysing and evaluating a thermal management solution via heat pipes for lithium-ion batteries in electric vehicles
title_sort analysing and evaluating a thermal management solution via heat pipes for lithium-ion batteries in electric vehicles
topic battery thermal management
heat pipe
EV
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/29358/