Thermal management remains a key challenge for lithium-ion batteries in electric vehicles, especially under transient driving and charging conditions. This study develops a coupled thermo-hydraulic model for a liquid-cooled battery thermal management system and uses it to compare four coolants with different thermophysical properties: water, ethylene glycol–water, propylene glycol–water, and Jet-A aviation fuel. Unlike studies that focus mainly on temperature reduction, the present work evaluates battery temperature, hydraulic pump power, and cooling load/heat rejection demand within the same framework. The coolants are tested under the FTP-75 driving cycle and a high-rate charging case while pump speed is varied between 1500 and 4500 rpm. Water provides the strongest cooling performance, reducing the battery temperature during FTP-75 from about 30 °C to 21.2 °C at 1500 rpm and 20.6–20.8 °C at 4500 rpm. During charging, water maintains the battery temperature near 23 °C at 1500 rpm, whereas ethylene glycol–water and Jet-A reach about 46–47 °C. Increasing pump speed improves thermal regulation, particularly for weaker-performing coolants, but it also increases auxiliary demand; for example, the RMS pump power of water during charging rises from 0.039 to 0.735 kW. Overall, the results show that coolant selection in liquid-cooled BTMS requires a balanced assessment of heat removal capability, pumping demand, and heat rejection requirements.
Abdelati et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: