Temperature control plays a critical role in mitigating the lifespan degradation mechanisms and ensuring thermal safety of lithium-ion batteries (LIBs) and proton exchange membrane fuel cells (PEMFCs). However, current energy management strategies (EMS) for fuel cell hybrid electric vehicles (FCHEVs) generally lack comprehensive thermal effect modeling and thermal runaway fault diagnosis, leading to irreversible aging and thermal runaway risks for LIBs and PEMFCs stacks under complex operating conditions. To address this challenge, this paper proposes a thermo-electrical co-optimization EMS incorporating thermal runaway fault diagnosis actuators, with the following innovations: firstly, a dual-layer framework integrates a temperature fault diagnosis-based penalty into the EMS and a real-time power regulator to suppress heat generation and constrain LIBs/PEMFCs output, achieving hierarchical thermal management and improved safety; secondly, the distributional soft actor–critic (DSAC)-based EMS incorporates energy consumption, state-of-health (SoH) degradation, and temperature fault diagnosis-based constraints into a composite penalty function, which regularizes the reward shaping and guides the policy toward efficient and safe operation; finally, a thermal safe constriction controller (TSCC) is designed to continuously monitor the temperature of power sources and automatically activate when temperatures exceed the optimal operating range. It intelligently identifies optimized actions that not only meet target power demands but also comply with safety constraints. Simulation results demonstrate that compared to DDPG, TD3, and SAC baseline strategies, DSAC-EMS achieves maximum reductions of 39.91% in energy consumption and 29.38% in SoH degradation. With the TSCC implementation, enhanced thermal safety is achieved, while the maximum energy-saving improvement reaches 25.29% and the maximum reduction in SoH degradation attains 20.32%.
Wang et al. (Sat,) studied this question.