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Online condition monitoring of lithium-ion and lead acid batteries for renewable energy applications

Electrochemical Impedance Spectroscopy (EIS) has been largely employed for the study of reaction kinetics and condition monitoring of batteries during different operational conditions, such as: Temperature, State of Charge (SoC) and State of Health (SoH) etc. The EIS plot translates to the impedance...

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Main Author: Alao, Olakunle Oluwatosin
Other Authors: Barendse, Paul
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Electrical Engineering 2019
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access_status_str Open Access
author Alao, Olakunle Oluwatosin
author2 Barendse, Paul
author_browse Alao, Olakunle Oluwatosin
Barendse, Paul
author_facet Barendse, Paul
Alao, Olakunle Oluwatosin
author_sort Alao, Olakunle Oluwatosin
collection Thesis
description Electrochemical Impedance Spectroscopy (EIS) has been largely employed for the study of reaction kinetics and condition monitoring of batteries during different operational conditions, such as: Temperature, State of Charge (SoC) and State of Health (SoH) etc. The EIS plot translates to the impedance profile of a battery and is fitted to an Equivalent Electric Circuit (EEC) that model the physicochemical processes occurring in the batteries. To precisely monitor the condition of the batteries, Kramers-Kronig relation: linearity, stability and causality as well as the appropriate perturbation amplitude applied during EIS should be adhered to. Regardless of the accuracy of EIS, its lengthy acquisition time makes it impracticable for online measurement. Different broadband signals have been proposed in literature to shorten EIS measurement time, with different researchers favouring one technique over the other. Nonetheless, broadband signals applied to characterize a battery must be reasonably accurate, with little effect on the systems instrumentation. The major objective of this study is to explore the differences in the internal chemistries of the lithium-ion and lead acid batteries and to reduce the time associated with their condition monitoring using EIS. In this regard, this study firstly queries the methodology for EIS experiments, by investigating the optimum perturbation amplitude for EIS measurement on both the lead acid and lithium-ion batteries. Secondly, this study utilizes electrochemical equations to predict the dynamics and operational conditions associated with batteries. It also investigates the effect of different operational conditions on the lead acid and lithium-ion batteries after EEC parameters have been extracted from EIS measurements. Furthermore, different broadband excitation techniques for rapid diagnostics are explored. An online condition monitoring system is implemented through the utilization of a DC-DC converter that is used to interface the battery with the load. The online system is applied alongside the different broadband signals. The deviation in the broadband impedance spectroscopy result is compared against the Frequency Response Analyzer (FRA) to determine the most suitable technique for battery state estimation. Based on the comparisons, the adoption of a novel technique – Chirp Broadband Signal Excitation (CBSE) is proposed for online condition monitoring of batteries, as it has the advantage of being faster and precise at the most important frequency decade of the impedance spectrum of batteries.
format Thesis
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:09.918Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2019
publishDateRange 2019
publishDateSort 2019
publisher Department of Electrical Engineering
publisherStr Department of Electrical Engineering
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/30059 Online condition monitoring of lithium-ion and lead acid batteries for renewable energy applications Alao, Olakunle Oluwatosin Barendse, Paul Engineering Electrochemical Impedance Spectroscopy (EIS) has been largely employed for the study of reaction kinetics and condition monitoring of batteries during different operational conditions, such as: Temperature, State of Charge (SoC) and State of Health (SoH) etc. The EIS plot translates to the impedance profile of a battery and is fitted to an Equivalent Electric Circuit (EEC) that model the physicochemical processes occurring in the batteries. To precisely monitor the condition of the batteries, Kramers-Kronig relation: linearity, stability and causality as well as the appropriate perturbation amplitude applied during EIS should be adhered to. Regardless of the accuracy of EIS, its lengthy acquisition time makes it impracticable for online measurement. Different broadband signals have been proposed in literature to shorten EIS measurement time, with different researchers favouring one technique over the other. Nonetheless, broadband signals applied to characterize a battery must be reasonably accurate, with little effect on the systems instrumentation. The major objective of this study is to explore the differences in the internal chemistries of the lithium-ion and lead acid batteries and to reduce the time associated with their condition monitoring using EIS. In this regard, this study firstly queries the methodology for EIS experiments, by investigating the optimum perturbation amplitude for EIS measurement on both the lead acid and lithium-ion batteries. Secondly, this study utilizes electrochemical equations to predict the dynamics and operational conditions associated with batteries. It also investigates the effect of different operational conditions on the lead acid and lithium-ion batteries after EEC parameters have been extracted from EIS measurements. Furthermore, different broadband excitation techniques for rapid diagnostics are explored. An online condition monitoring system is implemented through the utilization of a DC-DC converter that is used to interface the battery with the load. The online system is applied alongside the different broadband signals. The deviation in the broadband impedance spectroscopy result is compared against the Frequency Response Analyzer (FRA) to determine the most suitable technique for battery state estimation. Based on the comparisons, the adoption of a novel technique – Chirp Broadband Signal Excitation (CBSE) is proposed for online condition monitoring of batteries, as it has the advantage of being faster and precise at the most important frequency decade of the impedance spectrum of batteries. 2019-05-10T12:16:08Z 2019-05-10T12:16:08Z 2018 2019-05-06T12:39:54Z Master Thesis Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/30059 eng application/pdf Department of Electrical Engineering Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment
spellingShingle Engineering
Alao, Olakunle Oluwatosin
Online condition monitoring of lithium-ion and lead acid batteries for renewable energy applications
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Online condition monitoring of lithium-ion and lead acid batteries for renewable energy applications
title_full Online condition monitoring of lithium-ion and lead acid batteries for renewable energy applications
title_fullStr Online condition monitoring of lithium-ion and lead acid batteries for renewable energy applications
title_full_unstemmed Online condition monitoring of lithium-ion and lead acid batteries for renewable energy applications
title_short Online condition monitoring of lithium-ion and lead acid batteries for renewable energy applications
title_sort online condition monitoring of lithium ion and lead acid batteries for renewable energy applications
topic Engineering
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/30059
work_keys_str_mv AT alaoolakunleoluwatosin onlineconditionmonitoringoflithiumionandleadacidbatteriesforrenewableenergyapplications