Sandia LabNews

Sandia researchers seek ways to make lithium-ion batteries work longer, safer


Image of pic1-281

As part of the DOE-funded FreedomCAR program, Sandia’s Power Sources Technology Group is researching ways to make lithium-ion batteries longer-lived and safer. The research will lead to these batteries being used in new hybrid electric vehicles (HEVs) in the next five to 10 years.

“Batteries are a necessary part of hybrid electric-gasoline powered vehicles and someday, when the technology matures, will be part of hybrid electric-hydrogen fuel cell powered vehicles,” says Dan Doughty, manager of Advanced Power Sources Research and Development Dept. 2521. “Current hybrid vehicles use nickel-metal hydride batteries, but a safe lithium-ion battery will be a much better option for the hybrids.”

He notes the lithium-ion battery has four times the energy density of lead-acid batteries and two to three times the energy density of nickel-cadmium and nickel-metal hydride batteries. It also has the potential to be one of the lowest-cost battery systems.

Dan’s department receives about $1.5 million a year from the FreedomCAR program to improve the safety, lengthen the lifetime, and reduce costs of lithium-ion batteries.

The FreedomCAR program, initiated by President Bush in 2002, focuses on developing hydrogen-powered electric vehicles to free the US from dependence on foreign oil supplies. Five national laboratories — Sandia, Argonne, Lawrence Berkeley, Idaho, and Brookhaven — are involved in the program, each researching different aspects of making hybrid electric-hydrogen vehicles a reality.

Dept. 2521’s FreedomCAR work centers on the areas of battery abuse tolerance and accelerated lifetime prediction, with abuse tolerance receiving most of the focus.

“We want to develop a battery that has a graceful failure — meaning that if it’s damaged, it won’t cause other problems,” Dan says. “We have to understand how batteries fail and why they fail.”

Understanding abuse

The technical goal is to comprehend mechanisms that lead to poor abuse tolerance, including heat- and gas-generating reactions. Understanding the chemical response to abuse can point the way to better battery materials. But, Dan says, there is no “magic bullet” for completely stable lithium-ion cells.

“Fixing the problem will come from informed choices on improved cell materials, additives, and cell design, as well as good engineering practices.”

Work in abuse tolerance is beginning to shed light on mechanisms that control cell response, including effects of the anode and cathode, electrolyte breakdown, and battery additives.

The other area of work, accelerated life test, involves developing a method to predict lithium-ion battery life.

Empirical and mechanistic

“We have two approaches in our research — the empirical model and the mechanistic model,” Dan says. “The empirical model generates life prediction from accelerated degradation test data, while the mechanistic model relates life prediction to changes in battery materials. Our approach provides an independent measure of battery life so we don’t have to rely on what battery manufacturers tell us.”

Improved abuse test procedures developed at Sandia have led to lithium-ion test standards that the battery team has developed and recently published in a Sandia research report (SAND2005-3123). Dan anticipates that the Society of Automotive Engineers will soon adopt these test procedures as national standards, just as they adopted in 1999 (SAE J2464) the abuse test procedures that Sandia developed for Electric Vehicle batteries (SAND99-0497).

“There has been substantial progress in making batteries more tolerant to abusive conditions,” Dan says. “It won’t be long before these batteries will be used in gasoline-electric hybrid vehicles. And the great thing is this technology will be able to transfer over to the electric-hydrogen fuel cell powered hybrid vehicles of the future.”

Battery team members: Dan Doughty, J. Anthony (Tony) Romero, Brad Hance, Pete Roth, Dave Johnson, Lori Davis, Jill Langendorf, and Herb Case (all 2521).