학술논문

Physical examination of high capacity nickel-hydrogen battery cells
Document Type
Conference
Source
Proceedings of the 24th Intersociety Energy Conversion Engineering Conference Energy Conversion Engineering Conference, 1989. IECEC-89., Proceedings of the 24th Intersociety. :1371-1374 vol.3 1989
Subject
Power, Energy and Industry Applications
Batteries
Voltage
Degradation
Testing
Manufacturing
US Department of Defense
Low earth orbit satellites
Performance analysis
Performance evaluation
Polarization
Language
Abstract
In order to assess cell cycle performance and possible failure modes, some randomly selected nickel-hydrogen (Ni/H/sub 2/) battery cells of 83 Ah capacity were put through a rapid cycle test at 80% depth of discharge (DOD) using simulated low-earth-orbit conditions. A destructive physical analysis (DPA) was performed on several cells following the cycle tests. After nearly 1000 charge/discharge cycles, the cells from one manufacturer exhibited significant voltage performance degradation and internal stack damage. The cells from another manufacturer exhibited little voltage degradation and no significant internal damage. The authors summarize the important results of the cell DPAs. In particular, polarization test results show that active material extrusion from the pores of the positive plates can cause cell voltage performance degradation. Also, electrolyte (KOH) concentration gradients within a stack can be caused by a cell dome-to-dome temperature gradients, and nonuniform stack wearout can result.ETX

Online Access