Cluster Analysis of Cell Health and Characterization of Lithium and Active Material Loss in a Large Format LiFePO 4 Hybrid Vehicle Battery Pack

Currently, the second-life Li-ion battery (LIB) landscape lacks a widely accepted safety standard for determining the viability of retired batteries for reuse. 1 While the impact of abusive conditions on battery failures, such as toxic gas releases, fires, and explosions, has been studied extensivel...

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Veröffentlicht in:Meeting abstracts (Electrochemical Society) 2024-11, Vol.MA2024-02 (4), p.497-497
Hauptverfasser: Ramirez-Meyers, Katrina, Deshpande, Nirmit, Lee, Young-Geun, Namara, Kelly, Pan, Bonian, Morin, Hannah, Gauthier, Roby, Nock, Destenie, Dickey, Elizabeth C, Whitacre, Jay F
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Currently, the second-life Li-ion battery (LIB) landscape lacks a widely accepted safety standard for determining the viability of retired batteries for reuse. 1 While the impact of abusive conditions on battery failures, such as toxic gas releases, fires, and explosions, has been studied extensively, the understanding of how aging affects the likelihood of thermal runaway under normal use conditions remains limited. This knowledge gap underscores the critical need for a deeper understanding of material degradation throughout the LIB lifecycle and its direct safety implications. In response, researchers are exploring advanced characterization methods to deconvolve and identify degradation behaviors, typically using lab-aged cells. These methods, which range from non-destructive evaluation to post-mortem analyses, have revealed various degradation modes (such as active material loss and Li inventory loss) and mechanisms (including Li plating, SEI growth and decomposition, transition metal dissolution, and particle cracking). 2 However, the variability of these degradation modes in real-world battery packs remains poorly understood, making it challenging to estimate the likelihood of thermal runaway. A precise statistical understanding of these degradation mechanisms is essential for developing robust safety standards and maximizing the economic benefits of reusing LIBs. In this work, we apply differential voltage analysis to assess the statistical distribution of active material loss in a retired 1,536-cell hybrid-vehicle battery pack (see Ref. 3 for pack details). 3 Initially, we measured the capacity and ohmic resistance of 1,500 cells (98% of the pack) using galvanostatic cycling at a rate of 1C (Fig. 1A-D). We then implemented k-medoids clustering to categorize the cells based on their capacity and resistance (Fig. 1E). The representative medoid cell from each cluster was then selected for further analysis at a slower C/10 cycling rate to gather dV/dQ data. Using open-source software provided by Dahn et al., 4 we fit the measured dV/dQ curves to reference curves collected from a LiFePO 4 cathode vs. Li/Li+ and a graphite anode vs. Li/Li+ half-cells (the latter was provided by with the dV/dQ software). The fitting process yields 4 parameters: m G (active mass of the graphite anode), m LFP (active mass of the LFP cathode), LFP (LFP cathode slippage), and G (graphite anode slippage). Active material loss and slippage are then calculated relative to an uncy
ISSN:2151-2043
2151-2035
DOI:10.1149/MA2024-024497mtgabs