Title of article :
Aging of lithium-ion batteries
Author/Authors :
Guy Sarre، نويسنده , , Philippe Blanchard، نويسنده , , Michel Broussely، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Pages :
7
From page :
65
To page :
71
Abstract :
Abstract Lithium-Ion (liquid electrolyte) batteries are considered as long life and reliable systems. This paper: • introduces discussion about aging and degradation mechanism both for storage and cycling, • illustrates the proposed phenomena from results based on several years experimentation and obtained on scale one cells, • shows the behaviour of several kinds of active materials, • proposes some trends for life prediction. Aging in Li-Ion cells may mainly come from: • reactions of active materials with electrolyte at electrodes interfaces, • self degradation of active materials structure on cycling, • aging of non active components (ex: electrodes binders). These phenomena lead to energy and/or power losses. Reaction rates on depending on: • type of materials and reactivity • impurities • manufacturing processes • cell design • type of application and profile of use. On the negative electrode side the main parameters are passivation layer stability, the layer structure/composition (effect of additives in electrolyte and formation process), polluting agents. On the positive electrode side key factors seem to be the material structure evolution and organic solvent oxidation. These phenomena are highly dependent of voltage and temperature. So far, according to experimentation for electric (EV) and hybrid (HV) vehicles applications, using scale 1 cells built with nickel based positive material the results show: • more than 1 200 deep cycle (80% d.o.d. EV cycle) with only few percent of energy and power losses, • more than 500 000 shallow cycles (3% d.o.d. HV cycle) with negligible power losses, • 2 years of storage testing at full charge and various temperature (20 ◦C/40 ◦C/60 ◦C) leading to a life expectation of 10 years for EV applications and 15 years for HV applications.
Keywords :
lithium-ion batteries , Lithium-ion materials , Aging phenomenon , Life assessment , Lithium-ion cell performances
Journal title :
Journal of Power Sources
Serial Year :
2004
Journal title :
Journal of Power Sources
Record number :
444672
Link To Document :
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