Multi-Physics Numerical Analysis of Single-phase Immersion Cooling for Thermal Management of Li-Ion Batteries
Piyush Mani Tripathi, Amy M. Marconnet

TL;DR
This paper presents a comprehensive multi-physics modeling approach to analyze forced immersion cooling for lithium-ion batteries, evaluating different fluids and flow rates to optimize thermal management and ensure safety and performance.
Contribution
It introduces a fully coupled electrochemical-thermal-fluid-mechanical model for immersion cooling, providing new insights into the effects of different fluids and flow rates on battery cooling performance.
Findings
Strong coupling between electrochemical and heat transfer phenomena.
Comparison of deionized water and mineral oil as cooling fluids.
A new metric for evaluating cooling capacity considering flow parameters.
Abstract
Battery thermal management systems (BTMSs) are critical for efficient and safe operation of lithium-ion batteries (LIBs), especially for fast charging/discharging applications that generate significant heating within the cell. Forced immersion cooling, where a dielectric fluid flows in direct contact with the LIB cells, is an effective cooling approach. But because of its complex nature, a thorough understanding of the underlying physics - including the coupled electrochemical, thermal, fluid, and mechanical effects - is required before immersion cooling will see wide adoption into commercial systems. In this work, to investigate the performance of a LIB subjected to forced immersion cooling, we develop a fully coupled modeling approach that solves the detailed electrochemical model in conjunction with the thermal-fluid transport models for both the cell and fluid domain. After…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Battery Technologies Research · Radiation Effects in Electronics · Parallel Computing and Optimization Techniques
