Onboard early detection and mitigation of lithium plating in fast-charging batteries

Fast-charging is considered as one of the most desired features needed for lithium-ion batteries to accelerate the mainstream adoption of electric vehicles. However, current battery charging protocols mainly consist of conservative rate steps to avoid potential hazardous lithium plating and its asso...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2022-11, Vol.13 (1), p.7091-7091, Article 7091
Hauptverfasser: Huang, Wenxiao, Ye, Yusheng, Chen, Hao, Vilá, Rafael A., Xiang, Andrew, Wang, Hongxia, Liu, Fang, Yu, Zhiao, Xu, Jinwei, Zhang, Zewen, Xu, Rong, Wu, Yecun, Chou, Lien-Yang, Wang, Hansen, Xu, Junwei, Boyle, David Tomas, Li, Yuzhang, Cui, Yi
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Fast-charging is considered as one of the most desired features needed for lithium-ion batteries to accelerate the mainstream adoption of electric vehicles. However, current battery charging protocols mainly consist of conservative rate steps to avoid potential hazardous lithium plating and its associated parasitic reactions. A highly sensitive onboard detection method could enable battery fast-charging without reaching the lithium plating regime. Here, we demonstrate a novel differential pressure sensing method to precisely detect the lithium plating event. By measuring the real-time change of cell pressure per unit of charge (dP/dQ) and comparing it with the threshold defined by the maximum of dP/dQ during lithium-ion intercalation into the negative electrode, the onset of lithium plating before its extensive growth can be detected with high precision. In addition, we show that by integrating this differential pressure sensing into the battery management system (BMS), a dynamic self-regulated charging protocol can be realized to effectively extinguish the lithium plating triggered by low temperature (0 °C) while the conventional static charging protocol leads to catastrophic lithium plating at the same condition. We propose that differential pressure sensing could serve as an early nondestructive diagnosis method to guide the development of fast-charging battery technologies. Fast-charging is highly desired for lithium-ion batteries but is hindered by potential hazardous lithium plating and the associated parasitic reactions. Here, the authors report a nondestructive differential pressure sensing method for early detection and mitigation of lithium plating in fast-charging batteries.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-022-33486-4