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Technical Paper

Development of Detailed Model and Simplified Model of Lithium-Ion Battery Module under Mechanical Abuse

2022-12-16
2022-01-7120
In order to obtain a good understanding of mechanical behaviors of lithium-ion battery modules in electric vehicles, comprehensive experimental and numerical investigations were performed in the study. Mechanical indentation tests with different indentation heads, different loading directions and different impact speeds were performed on battery modules with prismatic cells. To mitigate thermal runaway, only fully discharged battery modules were used. The force-displacement responses and open circuit voltage were recorded and compared. It was found that the battery modules experienced different failure modes when subjected to mechanical abuse. Besides internal short circuit of cells, external short circuit from bus bar and vapor leakage of electrolyte were also found to deteriorate the mechanical and electrical integrity of the tested modules. Mechanical anisotropy and dynamic effect were found on the battery module.
Journal Article

Experimental Investigation of the Mechanical Behavior of Aluminum Adhesive Joints under Mixed-Mode Loading Conditions

2018-04-03
2018-01-0105
In recent years, structural adhesives have rapidly become the preferred alternative to resistance spot welding in fabricating stronger, lighter aluminum connections. Connections inevitably undergo and must withstand complex quasi-static and/or dynamic loads during their service life. Therefore, understanding how loading conditions affect the mechanical behavior of adhesive joints is vital to their design and the advancement of structural safety. Quasi-static and dynamic tests are performed to analyze both the strength and failure modes of aluminum 6062 substrates bonded by an adhesive (Darbond EP-1506) for an array of loading directions. An Arcan test device, which enables application of mixed-mode loads ranging from pure peel (mode I) to pure shear (mode II) to the adhesive layer, is employed in quasi-static testing. A self-designed medium-speed test machine is utilized to perform dynamic testing.
Journal Article

Identification of True Stress-Strain Curve of Thermoplastic Polymers under Biaxial Tension

2016-04-05
2016-01-0514
This article is concerned with identification of true stress-strain curve under biaxial tension of thermoplastic polymers. A new type of biaxial tension attachment was embedded first in a universal material test machine, which is able to transform unidirectional loading of the test machine to biaxial loading on the specimen with constant velocity. Cruciform specimen geometry was optimized via FE modeling. Three methods of calculating true stress in biaxial tension tests were compared, based on incompressibility assumption, linear elastic theory and inverse engineering method, respectively. The inverse engineering method is more appropriate for thermoplastic polymers since it considers the practical volume change of the material during biaxial tension deformation. The strategy of data processing was established to obtain biaxial tension true stress-strain curves of different thermoplastic polymers.
Technical Paper

In-situ Mechanical Characterization of Compression Response of Anode Coating Materials through Inverse Approach

2022-12-16
2022-01-7121
In this decade, the detailed multi-layer FE model is always applied for investigating the mechanical behavior of Li-ion batteries under mechanical abuse. However, establishing a detailed model of different types of batteries requires a series of material characterization of components. To improve the efficiency of the procedure of component calibration, we introduce a procedure of automatic coating material characterization as an example to represent the strategy. The proposed method is constructing a response solver through MATLAB to predict the mechanical behavior of the coating specimen's representative volume element (RVE) under designated test conditions. The coating material is represented through Drucker-Prager-Cap (DPC) model. All parameters, including boundary conditions and material parameters, are included in this solver.
Technical Paper

Mechanical Anisotropy and Strain-Rate Dependency of a Large Format Lithium-Ion Battery Cell: Experiments and Simulations

2021-04-06
2021-01-0755
In order to get a better understanding of the mechanical behavior of lithium-ion battery cells, especially for the mechanical anisotropy and dynamic effect, a series of tests for quasi-static indentation and dynamic impact tests has been designed. In the study, mechanical indentation tests with different indentation heads, different loading directions and different impact speeds were performed on a type of large format prismatic lithium-ion battery cells and jellyrolls of them. To mitigate thermal runaway, only fully-discharged cells and jellyrolls were used. The force-displacement response and open circuit voltage (OCV) were recorded and compared. It shows that jellyroll and battery cell have apparent mechanical anisotropy and strain-rate effect. The stiffness of jellyroll and cell in out-of-plane direction is much larger than that in two in-plane directions.
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