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Inverse Methods - Users Manual 5.6

Walsh, Timothy; Akcelik, Volkan; Aquino, Wilkins; Mccormick, Cameron; Sanders, Clay M.; Treweek, Benjamin; Kurzawski, Andrew J.; Smith, Chandler B.

The inverse methods team provides a set of tools for solving inverse problems in structural dynamics and thermal physics, and also sensor placement optimization via Optimal Experimental Design (OED). These methods are used for designing experiments, model calibration, and verfication/validation analysis of weapons systems. This document provides a user's guide to the input for the three apps that are supported for these methods. Details of input specifications, output options, and optimization parameters are included.

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Energy Redistribution as a Method for Mitigating Risk of Propagating Thermal Runaway

2022 IEEE Energy Conversion Congress and Exposition Ecce 2022

Mueller, Jacob A.; Preger, Yuliya; Kurzawski, Andrew J.; Garcia Rodriguez, Luciano A.; Hewson, John C.

Propagating thermal runaway events are a significant threat to utility-scale storage installations. A propagating thermal runaway event is a cascading series of failures in which energy released from a failed cell triggers subsequent failures in nearby cells. Without intervention, propagation can turn an otherwise manageable single cell failure into a full system conflagration. This study presents a method of mitigating the severity of propagating thermal runaway events in utility-scale storage systems by leveraging the capabilities of a module-interfaced power conversion architecture. The method involves strategic depletion of storage modules to delay or arrest propagation, reducing the total thermal energy released in the failure event. The feasibility of the method is assessed through simulations of propagating thermal runaway events in a 160 kW/80 kWh energy storage system.

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Energy Redistribution as a Method for Mitigating Risk of Propagating Thermal Runaway

2022 IEEE Energy Conversion Congress and Exposition, ECCE 2022

Mueller, Jacob A.; Preger, Yuliya; Kurzawski, Andrew J.; Garcia Rodriguez, Luciano A.; Hewson, John C.

Propagating thermal runaway events are a significant threat to utility-scale storage installations. A propagating thermal runaway event is a cascading series of failures in which energy released from a failed cell triggers subsequent failures in nearby cells. Without intervention, propagation can turn an otherwise manageable single cell failure into a full system conflagration. This study presents a method of mitigating the severity of propagating thermal runaway events in utility-scale storage systems by leveraging the capabilities of a module-interfaced power conversion architecture. The method involves strategic depletion of storage modules to delay or arrest propagation, reducing the total thermal energy released in the failure event. The feasibility of the method is assessed through simulations of propagating thermal runaway events in a 160 kW/80 kWh energy storage system.

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Soot Predictions with a Laminar Flamelet Combustion Model in SIERRA/Fuego on a Coflow Scenario

Kurzawski, Andrew J.; Hansen, Michael A.; Hewson, John C.

This report describes an assessment of flamelet based soot models in a laminar ethylene coflow flame with a good selection of measurements suitable for model validation. Overall flow field and temperature predictions were in good agreement with available measurements. Soot profiles were in good agreement within the flame except for near the centerline where imperfections with the acetylene-based soot-production model are expected to be greatest. The model was challenged to predict the transition between non-sooting and sooting conditions with non-negligible soot emissions predicted even down to small flow rates or flame sizes. This suggests some possible deficiency in the soot oxidation models that might alter the amount of smoke emissions from flames, though this study cannot quantify the magnitude of the effect for large fires.

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LIM1TR: Lithium-Ion Modeling with 1-D Thermal Runaway (V.1.0)

Kurzawski, Andrew J.; Shurtz, Randy

LIM1TR (Lithium-Ion Modeling with 1-D Thermal Runaway) is an open-source code that uses the finite volume method to simulate heat transfer and chemical kinetics on a quasi 1-D domain. The target application of this software is to simulate thermal runaway in systems of lithium-ion batteries. The source code for LIM1TR can be found at https://github.com/ajkur/lim1tr. This user guide details the steps required to create and run simulations with LIM1TR starting with setting up the Python environment, generating an input file, and running a simulation. Additional details are provided on the output of LIM1TR as well as extending the code with custom reaction models. This user guide concludes with simple example analyses of common battery thermal runaway scenarios. The corresponding input files and processing scripts can be found in the “Examples” folder in the on-line repository, with select input files included in the appendix of this document.

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DNS/LES Study of Representative Wall-Bounded Turbulent Flows using SIERRA/Fuego

Koo, Heeseok; Hewson, John C.; Brown, Alexander L.; Knaus, Robert C.; Kurzawski, Andrew J.; Clemenson, Michael

This report summarizes a series of SIERRA/Fuego validation efforts of turbulent flow models on canonical wall-bounded configurations. In particular, direct numerical simulations (DNS) and large eddy simulations (LES) turbulence models are tested on a periodic channel, a periodic pipe, and an open jet for which results are compared to the velocity profiles obtained theoretically or experimentally. Velocity inlet conditions for channel and pipe flows are developed for application to practical simulations. To show this capability, LES is performed over complex terrain in the form of two natural hills and the results are compared with other flow solvers. The practical purpose of the report is to document the creation of inflow boundary conditions of fully developed turbulent flows for other LES calculations where the role of inflow turbulence is critical.

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Predicting cell-to-cell failure propagation and limits of propagation in lithium-ion cell stacks

Proceedings of the Combustion Institute

Kurzawski, Andrew J.; Torres-Castro, Loraine; Shurtz, Randy; Lamb, Joshua; Hewson, John C.

Thermal runaway of Li-ion batteries is a risk that is magnified when stacks of lithium-ion cells are used for large scale energy storage. When limits of propagation can be identified so that systems can be designed to prevent large scale cascading failure even if a failure does occur, these systems will be safer. The prediction of cell-to-cell failure propagation and the propagation limits in lithium-ion cell stacks were studied to better understand and identify safe designs. A thermal-runaway model was considered based on recent developments in thermochemical source terms. Propagating failure was characterized by temperatures above which calorimetry data is available. Results showed high temperature propagating failure predictions are too rapid unless an intra-particle diffusion limit is included, introducing a Damköhler number limiter into the rate expression. This new model form was evaluated against cell-to-cell failure propagation where the end cell of a stack is forced into thermal runaway through a nail-induced short circuit. Limits of propagation for this configuration are identified. Results showed cell-to-cell propagation predictions are consistent with measurements over a range of cell states of charge and with the introduction of metal plates between cells to add system heat capacity representative of structural members. This consistency extends from scenarios where propagation occurs through scenarios where propagation is prevented.

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Predicting cell-to-cell failure propagation and limits of propagation in lithium-ion cell stacks

Proceedings of the Combustion Institute

Kurzawski, Andrew J.; Torres-Castro, Loraine; Shurtz, Randy; Lamb, Joshua; Hewson, John C.

Thermal runaway of lithium-ion batteries is a risk that is magnified when stacks of lithium-ion cells are used for large scale energy storage. When limits of propagation can be identified so that systems can be designed to prevent large scale cascading failure even if a failure does occur, these systems will be safer. This work addresses the prediction of cell-to-cell failure propagation and the propagation limits in lithium-ion cell stacks to better understand and identify safe designs. A thermal-runaway model is presented based on recent developments in thermochemical source terms. It is noted that propagating failure is characterized by temperatures above which calorimetry data is available. Results show high temperature propagating failure predictions are too rapid unless an intra-particle diffusion limit is included, introducing a Damköhler number limiter into the rate expression. This new model form is evaluated against cell-to-cell failure propagation where the end cell of a stack is forced into thermal runaway through a nail-induced short circuit. Limits of propagation for this configuration are identified. Results show cell-to-cell propagation predictions are consistent with measurements over a range of cell states of charge and with the introduction of metal plates between cells to add system heat capacity representative of structural members. This consistency extends from scenarios where propagation occurs through scenarios where propagation is prevented.

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Results 26–50 of 71
Results 26–50 of 71
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