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Elsevier, Journal of Power Sources, (263), p. 223-230, 2014

DOI: 10.1016/j.jpowsour.2014.04.033

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Li-Ion polymer cells thermal property changes as a function of cycle-life

Journal article published in 2014 by Hossein Maleki, Hsin Wang ORCID, Wally Porter, Jerry Hallmark
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

The impact of elevated temperature charge–discharge cycling on thermal conductivity (K-value) of Lithium Ion Polymer (LIP) cells of various chemistries from three different manufacturers was investigated. These included high voltage (Graphite/LiCoO2:3.0–4.35 V), wide voltage (Si:C/LiCoO2:2.7–4.35 V) and conventional (Graphite/LiCoO2:3.0–4.2 V) chemistries. Investigation results show limited variability within the in-plane and through-plane K-values for the fresh cells with graphite-based anodes from all three suppliers. After 500 cycles at 45 °C, in-plane and through-plane K-values of the high voltage cells reduced less vs. those for the wide voltage cells. Such results suggest that high temperature cycling could have a greater impact on thermal properties of Si:C cells than on the LIP cells with graphite (Gr) anode cells we tested. This difference is due to the excess swelling of Si:C-anode based cells vs. Gr-anode cells during cycling, especially at elevated temperatures. Thermal modeling is used to evaluate the impact of K-value changes, due to cycles at 45 °C, on the cells internal heat propagation under internal short circuit condition that leads to localized meltdown of the separator.