Safe crash integration of inherently unsafe battery technologies

被引:0
|
作者
Leitgeb, W. [1 ]
Thaler, A. [1 ]
机构
[1] VIRTUAL VEHICLE Res Ctr, Inffeldgasse 21a, A-8010 Graz, Austria
来源
ELEKTROTECHNIK UND INFORMATIONSTECHNIK | 2015年 / 132卷 / 03期
关键词
lithium-ion batteries; automotive crash safety; battery integration;
D O I
10.1007/s00502-015-0298-1
中图分类号
TM [电工技术]; TN [电子技术、通信技术];
学科分类号
0808 ; 0809 ;
摘要
Current electrified vehicles (battery-electric BEV and plug-in hybrid vehicles PHEV) suffer from two partially dependent characteristics: high gross weight and limited pure electric driving range. The design possibilities for these vehicles are limited by crash safety requirements, among other factors. The safe battery housing and the current requirement of no-significant deformation on the battery severely restrict options for placement within the vehicle. Structural stiffening measures add additional weight to the already quite heavy battery system. To better utilize the available integration space, deformation and failure characteristics of traction batteries need to be better understood. Today's vehicle development process relies heavily on simulation tools, where finite-element (FE) methods are the established means for full-vehicle crash simulation. Therefore, to evaluate the structural performance capabilities and failure characteristics, the battery system must be adequately modeled and integrated with these methods. The development of new simulation tools that can be used in concert with the established ones are one priority of current research. The focus of this article is on integration aspects, especially in terms of failure prediction for the battery as a component. This article gives an overview on currently developed methods enabling the design of modern, structurally integrated battery concepts, while targeting crash safety demands and increased energy density for longer-range electric driving.
引用
收藏
页码:155 / 159
页数:5
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Safe crash seat
    Thilmany, Jean
    MECHANICAL ENGINEERING, 2006, 128 (07) : 18 - 18
  • [32] Safety in fusion an inherently safe process
    Willis, Carley
    Liou, Joanne
    IAEA Bulletin, 2021, 62 (02): : 14 - 15
  • [33] DESIGN OF INHERENTLY SAFE PROCESSES AND PLANTS
    KANTYKA, TA
    CHEMICAL ENGINEER-LONDON, 1979, (342): : 133 - 133
  • [34] Inherently safe backup routing with BGP
    Gao, LX
    Griffin, TG
    Rexford, J
    IEEE INFOCOM 2001: THE CONFERENCE ON COMPUTER COMMUNICATIONS, VOLS 1-3, PROCEEDINGS: TWENTY YEARS INTO THE COMMUNICATIONS ODYSSEY, 2001, : 547 - 556
  • [35] DEVELOPMENT OF INHERENTLY SAFE TECHNOLOGIES FOR LARGE SCALE BWRS (2) PASSIVE WATER-COOLING SYSTEM
    Ishida, Naoyuki
    Watahiki, Naohisa
    Fujimoto, Kiyoshi
    Hosoi, Hideaki
    Kitou, Kazuaki
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 22ND INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON NUCLEAR ENGINEERING - 2014, VOL 3, 2014,
  • [36] DEVELOPMENT OF INHERENTLY SAFE TECHNOLOGIES FOR LARGE SCALE BWRS (5) OPERATION SUPPORT SYSTEM FOR PLANT ACCIDENTS
    Kanada, Masaki
    Ishii, Yoshihiko
    Arita, Setsuo
    Kamoshida, Ryota
    Ishikawa, Tadaaki
    Katono, Kenichi
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 22ND INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON NUCLEAR ENGINEERING - 2014, VOL 3, 2014,
  • [37] Aural polyps: Safe or unsafe disease?
    Prasannaraj, T
    De, NS
    Narasimhan, I
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF OTOLARYNGOLOGY, 2003, 24 (03) : 155 - 158
  • [38] Safe CPS from Unsafe Controllers
    Mehmood, Usama
    Bak, Stanley
    Smolka, Scott A.
    Stoller, Scott D.
    PROCEEDINGS OF 2021 WORKSHOP ON COMPUTATION-AWARE ALGORITHMIC DESIGN FOR CYBER-PHYSICAL SYSTEMS (CAADCPS), 2021, : 26 - 28
  • [39] INHERENTLY-SAFE POWER REACTOR DYONISOS (DYNAMIC NUCLEAR INHERENTLY-SAFE REACTOR OPERATING WITH SPHERES).
    Taube, M.
    Lanfranchi, M.
    von Weissenfluh, Th.
    Ligou, J.
    Yadigaroglu, G.
    Taube, P.
    1600, (13):
  • [40] Modeling safe and unsafe driving behaviour
    Verschuur, William L. G.
    Hurts, Karel
    ACCIDENT ANALYSIS AND PREVENTION, 2008, 40 (02): : 644 - 656