Addressing Lithium-Ion Battery Resilience

When:  Sep 7, 2017 from 17:30 to 18:30 (MT)
Associated with  University of New Mexico
Addressing Lithium-ion Battery Resilience
By
Heather Barkholtz
Thursday, September 7, 2017 5:30 PM
Meet and Greet at 5
The University of New Mexico Conference Center, Auditorium
1634 University Blvd. NE
Free and open to the public
Pizza with the speaker will follow the lecture
Heather Barkholtz is a Postdoctoral Appointee in the Energy Storage Technology and Systems Group at Sandia National Laboratories. Her research goal is to improve our understanding of lithium-ion battery safety and reliability to enable widespread adoption of large energy storage systems.
Abstract: Lithium-ion batteries have experienced tremendous popularity, especially in portable consumer electronics. Increasingly, lithium-ion batteries (LiB) are being deployed in larger applications such as electric vehicles and grid-level energy storage. As energy storage systems grow in scale, safety and reliability becomes more critical in determining their commercial success. In an effort to quantify and enhance LiB safety and reliability, a series of experiments were performed. When electrochemical performance of various commercial cells was surveyed and compared, it was discovered that unintentional abuse conditions can be elicited within the manufacturer suggested operating windows. Although none of these conditions instigated immediate failure, the cells were likely damaged. Next, we moved towards understanding the mechanism of cell decay and failure. We found that cell chemistry and manufacturing processes greatly impact the response to elevated temperatures. Finally, a critical temperature representing thermal runaway’s point of no return was defined. Cooling was used in an attempt to prevent catastrophic thermal runaway including venting and fire. Ultimately, this work is heading toward development of failure mitigation techniques means to prevent LiB fires.

Location

University of New Mexico Conference Center (Continuing Education)
1634 University Blvd. NE
Albuquerque, NM 87131

Contact

Jacqueline Ericksen
505-821-0299
jhericksen@msn.com