ABSTRACT This study examines the cooling performance of lithium‐ion (Li‐ion) batteries in electric vehicles, emphasizing the importance of maintaining temperatures below 35°C to ensure efficiency and safety. A simulation‐based approach is used to study battery pack cooling using a liquid coolant (deionized water) within a cold plate system, focusing on a 16‐cell battery pack connected in series‐parallel. A novel stereoscopic‐serpentine cold plate design is implemented. The thermal response of the battery pack is evaluated under constant and worldwide harmonized light vehicles test cycle (WLTC Class 3 drive) discharge rates. The inlet temperature and inlet flow velocities of the liquid coolant are varied. The simulation results for the stereoscopic‐serpentine cold plate design are compared with those for the traditional serpentine bottom cold plate design. The new design improved coolant flow and effectively reduced temperature differences in the battery pack. The findings highlight that lowering the coolant temperature is significantly more effective for reducing the battery temperature than increasing the coolant flow speed, with a 1% decrease in coolant temperature leading to a 7.1% reduction in the maximum battery temperature, compared with a mere 0.21% reduction from a 1% increase in coolant flow speed.
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Anoop Kanjirakat
Rahul Saldanha
Pramod G. K.
Battery energy
Manipal Academy of Higher Education
Indo Korea Science and Technology
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Kanjirakat et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69c8c2d1de0f0f753b39d46e — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/bte2.70109