Thermal control represents one of the most important parameters influencing the safety and reliability of lithium-ion batteries, especially at high rates required for modern electric vehicles. The present paper investigates the thermal and electrothermal performance of a lithium iron phosphate (LiFePO4) battery pack using a combination of experimental, statistical, and numerical methods. The 8S5P module was assembled and examined under load tests of 200, 400, and 600 W with and without active air-based cooling. The findings indicate that cooling reduced cell surface temperature by up to 10 °C and extended discharge time by 7–16% under various load conditions, emphasizing the effect of thermal management on battery performance and safety. In order to more systematically investigate the impact of ambient temperature and load, a RSM study with a central composite design (CCD; 13 runs) was performed, resulting in two very significant quadratic models (R2 > 0.98) for peak temperature and discharge duration prediction. The optimum conditions are estimated at a 200 W load and an ambient temperature of 20 °C. Based on experimentally determined parameters, a finite-element simulation model was established, and its predictions agreed well with the measured results, which verified the analysis. Integrating measurements, statistical modeling, and simulation provides a tri-phase methodology to date for determining and optimizing battery performance under the electrothermal dynamics of varied environments.
Abdelati et al. (Tue,) studied this question.