An air-cooling BTMS has the advantages of light weight, low cost, convenient maintenance and no hidden danger of coolant leakage. The current research aimed to investigate the thermal performance of the forced air-cooling BTMS using AFHS, thus the maximum temperature of the battery, the temperature difference of the battery, and the pressure drop are the important factors that should be considered for the air-cooling BTMS. The flow and thermal performance of AFHS under different parameters were studied, and the results were compared with that without AFHS.
4.1. Air-Cooling BTMS without AFHS
Figure 3a shows the temperature distribution of the battery without AFHS at the mass flow rate
qm = 10 gs
−1. It can be seen that the temperature downstream of the battery was higher than that upstream along the air flow direction. The reason for this phenomenon is that when the air flows through the battery surface, the air first transfers heat with the upstream of the battery, resulting in the rapid reduction of the cooling capacity of the air and reduces the heat transfer performance downstream. Hence, the battery temperature is not evenly distributed.
Figure 3b shows the pressure drop
Pd between inlet and outlet without AFHS; it can be seen that the
Pd increased gradually with the increase of mass flow rate
qm. The average temperature
Tav and temperature difference
Td of the battery under different mass flow rates of cooling air are shown in
Figure 3c,d, respectively. Obviously, there was a negative correlation between the
Tav and the
qm. The
Tav decreased with the increase of
qm. In order to keep the maximum temperature of the battery lower than 40 °C, at least 15 gs
−1 of cooling air is required. Similarly, the temperature difference
Td also decreases with the increase of
qm, and the
Td is less than 3 °C at 15 gs
−1 of cooling air.
4.2. Air-Cooling BTMS with Homogeneous AFHS
The open-cell aluminium foam has many irregularly shaped fluid channels; when cooling air flows through these channels, the heat transfers between the air and the three-dimensional network structure under the action of forced convection. On the one hand, the complex three-dimensional network structure of aluminium foam enhances the nonlinear effect of fluid. On the other hand, the large specific surface area of the aluminium foam is also an important reason for its good heat transfer performance. In addition, the high thermal conductivity of aluminium is also one of the factors to improve the heat transfer capacity. As a carrier of rapid heat transfer, the solid skeleton of the aluminium foam with high thermal conductivity is conducive to the uniform temperature of the whole porous area, transferring the heat to the fluid as soon as possible and accelerating the heat transfer process.
Figure 4 shows the pressure drop
Pd versus mass flow rate
qm with different parameters of AFHS. In all cases, the increase of
qm led to the increase of
Pd. In addition, at the same pore density, the poor permeability of the aluminium foam with lower porosity resulted in a higher
Pd. Moreover, pore density has a remarkable influence on
Pd, the aluminium foam with large pore density has more ligaments, and the surface area of the solid aluminum skeleton per unit volume is much larger than that of low pore density foam, resulting in more flow resistance. Therefore, under the approximate porosity, the 40 PPI aluminium foam produced a higher
Pd than 10 and 20 PPI aluminium foam.
Figure 5a,b show the temperature distribution of the battery at 5 gs
−1 of cooling air for 10 PPI AFHS with a porosity of 0.918 and 0.682, respectively. It can be seen that the temperature distribution trend was similar to the case that without using AFHS, the temperature of the battery gradually increased along the direction of air flow. However, the
Tav of the battery was significantly lower than the case without AFHS.
Figure 6 shows the average temperature
Tav of the battery with different parameters of AFHS. At 5 gs
−1 of cooling air, the
Tav of the battery with AFHS was below 34 °C, the temperature control ability was much better than that without AFHS. It can also be seen that at a constant mass flow rate
qm and PPI, the battery with large porosity of AFHS had a higher
Tav. That is because there are more pores in large porosity AFHS, so the effective convective heat transfer area per unit volume is smaller. In contrast, the effective convective heat transfer area per unit volume of low porosity AFHS was larger, and a better cooling effect was achieved in air forced convection. As a result, the battery with low porosity AFHS had a lower
Tav. When the AFHS had a similar porosity, the effect of PPI on the
Tav was negligible at a constant
qm. For example, when the
qm was 2 gs
−1, the
Tav of the battery with 10 PPI and 0.918 porosity AFHS was 39.92 °C, while the
Tav of battery with 20 PPI and 0.924 porosity AFHS was 39.87 °C.
When the cooling air flows over the surface of the battery, it first takes away the heat upstream, so the cooling capacity decreases gradually along the flow direction, resulting in the downstream temperature always being higher than the upstream temperature. This is the main reason for the uneven temperature of the battery. The
Td of the battery should be as small as possible to ensure safety and electrical performance.
Figure 7 shows the
Td of the battery with different parameters of AFHS. It can be seen that the
Td of the battery with AFHS was negatively related to mass flow rate
qm, that is, the
Td decreased with the increase of
qm. It is worth noting that the
Td of the battery increased significantly with AFHS compared with that without AFHS. For LIB, the ideal
Td was less than 5 °C. However, the
Td of the battery was found to exceed 7 °C at
qm = 2 gs
−1. In all cases, at least 5 gs
−1 of cooling air is required to achieve
Td of below 5 °C.
When the mass flow rate qm and pore density of AFHS remain unchanged, the temperature difference Td of the battery is also negatively related to the porosity of the AFHS, that is, the larger the porosity, the smaller the Td of the battery, while the pore density of AFHS has barely any effect on the Td of the battery. For example, at qm = 5 gs−1, the Td of the battery is 4.39 °C when using AFHS with 10 PPI and 0.794 porosity, while the Td of the battery with AFHS of 20 PPI and 0.774 porosity is 4.36 °C.
Figure 8a shows the relationship between the temperature control coefficient
α and the pumping power Ω, the range of pumping power represents the power of the different systems maintaining the mass flow at 2 to 7 gs
−1. In all cases, the
α increased with the increase of the Ω, but it rose more slowly at a high pumping power. In addition, the
α of low porosity AFHS was slightly larger in the whole pumping power range, but more pumping power was needed to achieve the same
α.
Figure 8b shows variations in temperature uniformity coefficient
β with the pumping power Ω for various cases. Since the temperature difference was greater than 5 °C at low mass flow, the
β was less than 0 at low pumping power. In the whole pumping power range, the
β of high porosity AFHS was higher than that of low porosity AFHS, and less pumping power was needed to reach the same
β, which means that the battery temperature field uniformity with high porosity AFHS is better.
Figure 9 shows the figure of merit (FOM) versus mass flow rate
qm when using the AFHS of different porosity and pore density. The results show that the FOM value was larger than 1 in all cases, which indicates the comprehensive convection performance of AFHS with different parameters was better than that without AFHS. When the pore density remained unchanged, the average surface heat transfer coefficient of the AFHS with larger porosity was smaller, while the accompanying pumping power was also smaller, which eventually led to a higher FOM. In addition, when the porosities were similar, the AFHS with larger PPI consumed more pumping power, resulting in a lower FOM. For all calculated parameters above 10 PPI and 0.918 porosity, AFHS had the highest FOM, indicating that it performed better than the others when considering heat convection and energy dissipation.
4.3. Air-Cooling BTMS with the AFHS of Gradient Porosity Designs
Compared with the situation without AFHS, using homogeneous AFHS could remarkably enhance the thermal performance, but pressure drop and temperature differences were even greater. Therefore, the gradient design in aluminium foam was considered to reduce flow resistance and improve temperature uniformity. Considering that the pore density has little effect on the heat transfer characteristics, the gradient porosity designs were adopted in subsequent analyses, and the pore density was all 10 PPI.
The gradient of porosity is controlled by the following equation:
where
εmax and
εmin are the maximum and minimum porosity, respectively, in the current study
εmax = 0.92 and
εmin = 0.68;
m represents the parameter controlling the porosity;
x/
l is the normalised distance.
The variation of the porosity gradient of aluminium foam for increasing and decreasing patterns is shown in
Figure 10. For the porosity-increasing gradient pattern (PIGP), m = 0.1, 1, and 10 correspond to the equivalent homogeneous porosity levels of 0.9, 0.8 and 0.7, respectively, while for the porosity-decreasing gradient pattern (PDGP), m = 0.1, 1, and 10 correspond to the equivalent homogeneous porosity levels of 0.7, 0.8 and 0.9, respectively.
The gradient porosity can be realised by the user-defined function UDF in Ansys-fluent, and the change of coefficient of viscous resistance terms and inertial resistance terms caused by the change of gradient porosity can be calculated by the Ergun formula [
37]. The porosity is set to change perpendicular to the flow direction (
Z-axis direction) and along the flow direction (
X-axis direction), and
C1 and
C2 change accordingly with porosity.
4.3.1. AFHS of Gradient Porosity Designs in the Z-Axis Direction (Perpendicular to the Flow Direction)
Figure 11 shows the pressure drop
Pd of AFHS with gradient porosity designs in the
Z-axis direction (perpendicular to the flow direction). As can be seen, there was no difference in
Pd between using PIDP and PDGP at the same equivalent porosity, indicating that the two patterns have the same influence on flow performance in the
Z-axis direction. Moreover, the
Pd of the two patterns was lower than that of the homogeneous porosity AFHS at the same equivalent porosity, which indicates that the gradient porosity designs in the
Z-axis direction can improve the flow performance. The reason for this phenomenon is that when the porosity change direction is perpendicular to the flow direction, the air tends to flow to the part with large porosity at a higher speed, so the overall flow resistance decreases and the pressure drop decreases.
Figure 12 shows the battery temperature distributions with AFHS in the two gradient patterns at
qm = 5 gs
−1, but the difference between the two cases is not obvious.
Figure 13a shows the average temperature
Tav of the battery with the AFHS of gradient porosity designs in the
Z-axis direction. We can see that the
Tav of the battery with AFHS of PIGP was almost the same as that with equivalent homogeneous porosity AFHS, while the
Tav of the battery with AFHS of PDGP was higher than that with equivalent homogeneous porosity AFHS. This is mainly because the porosity near the heating surface is large with the PDGP, and the solid skeleton volume in the porous medium area is small, which makes the heat conduction between the aluminium foam and the heated surface deteriorate, and ultimately leads to a weakening in the heat transfer effect.
Figure 13b shows the
Td of the battery with the AFHS with gradient porosity designed in the
Z-axis direction. The
Td of the battery with AFHS of PIGP was almost the same as that with the equivalent homogeneous porosity AFHS. However, using the AFHS of PDGP leads to
Td being slightly less than that at the equivalent porosity.
Figure 14a shows the temperature control coefficient
α versus pumping power Ω with AFHS with gradient porosity designed in the
Z-axis direction. At low porosity level, the
α was slightly greater over the entire pumping power range. Within a constant porosity level, there was no obvious difference in the
α. However, it can be seen from the enlarged figure, when the
α with the homogeneous porosity AFHS was equal to that with AFHS of PIGP, the Ω required for AFHS of PIGP was smaller. When the same Ω was required for AFHS of PIGP and PDGP, the AFHS of PIGP had a lower
Tav, resulting in the AFHS of PIGP having a larger
α than that of PDGP. At low pumping power (Ω < 0.2 W), the AFHS of PIGP with
m = 0.1 had the highest
α.
Figure 14b shows the temperature uniformity coefficient
β versus pumping power Ω with the AFHS with gradient porosity designed in the
Z-axis direction. As the mass flow rate increased, the
Td of the battery with AFHS of different gradients became closer, so the maximum value of
β was almost the same in the whole pumping power range. Since the
Td of the battery with AFHS of PDGP was smaller than that of PIGP under the same equivalent porosity level, it led to a slightly larger
β with PDGP.
Figure 15 shows FOM versus mass flow rate with the AFHS with gradient porosity designed in the
Z-axis direction. Compared with the homogeneous porosity AFHS, the AFHS with gradient porosity designed in the
Z-axis direction (perpendicular to the flow direction) reduces the pressure drop. Therefore, with little difference in heat transfer performance, the AFHS of PIGP required less pumping power and resulted in a larger FOM. Meanwhile, the AFHS of PDGP had a small convective heat transfer coefficient leading to a smaller FOM. Considering the heat convection and energy consumption, an AFHS with PIGP in the
Z-axis direction is superior to those with homogeneous porosity.
4.3.2. AFHS with Gradient Porosity Designed in the X-Axis Direction (the Flow Direction)
Figure 16 shows the pressure drop
Pd of AFHS with gradient porosity designed in the
X-axis direction (the air flow direction). At the same porosity levels, the pressure drop of AFHS with gradient porosity designed in the
X-axis direction was not significantly different from that of homogeneous porosity AFHS. This means that the gradient porosity designed in the
X-axis direction will not improve the flow performance of the AFHS.
Figure 17a,b shows temperature distributions of battery with AFHS with gradient porosity designed in the
X-axis direction.
Figure 17c shows the
Tav of the battery with AFHS with gradient porosity designed in the
X-axis direction. It was found that at the same porosity level, whether using the AFHS of PIGP or PDGP, the
Tav was almost unchanged, which was slightly higher than that with the equivalent homogeneous porosity AFHS, indicating the gradient porosity designed in the
X-axis direction has no effect on reducing the
Tav.
To show the influence of gradient porosity designed along the flow direction on temperature difference
Td more directly, the
Td of the battery was divided into three figures according to the equivalent porosity level, which are shown in
Figure 17d–f. Under the same porosity level, the battery with AFHS of PDGP had a smaller temperature difference, while with AFHS of PIGP had a larger temperature difference compared with the equivalent homogeneous porosity AFHS. During the cooling process, the cooling air shows the trend of increasing its temperature, which results in the upstream of the battery along the flow direction generally having a better cooling effect than the downstream. Therefore, the idea of reducing the battery temperature difference is to weaken the upstream heat transfer effect or strengthen the downstream heat transfer effect. Compared with the homogeneous porosity AFHS, when the porosity decreases along the flow direction, the upstream high porosity aluminum foam has more internal pores, and the effective heat transfer area per unit volume is smaller, thus weakening the heat transfer effect of the upstream of the battery. The low-porosity aluminum foam in the downstream has a larger effective heat transfer area, which strengthens the downstream heat transfer effect, so the temperature difference decreases. As the porosity increases along the flow direction, the upstream low-porosity aluminum foam has more convective heat transfer area, thereby enhancing the heat transfer effect in the upstream of the battery, while the downstream high porosity aluminium foam weakens the heat transfer effect, thus resulting in the increase of the temperature difference. Comparing the above three figures, it can also be found that using the AFHS of PDGP with m = 1, the lowest temperature difference was
Td = 3.1 °C at
qm = 7 gs
−1.
Figure 18a shows temperature control coefficient
α with AFHS with gradient porosity designed in the
Z-axis direction. Since the average temperature of battery and pressure drop under the same porosity level were almost identical, the temperature control coefficients
α were basically the same. The temperature uniformity coefficient
β with AFHS with gradient porosity designed in the
Z-axis direction is shown in
Figure 18b. Obviously, using the AFHS of PDGP can significantly improve the
β under the same equivalent porosity level. Meanwhile, when using AFHS with PDGP in the
x-axis direction, the
β with m = 10 was similar to that of m = 0.1, but less pumping power was required with m = 10. Thus, the AFHS of PDGP with m = 10 is a better design to reduce the battery temperature difference.
Figure 19 shows the FOM with AFHS with gradient porosity designed in the
X-axis direction. According to the above analysis, compared with the homogeneous porosity AFHS, the AFHS of PIGP in the
X-axis direction strengthened the heat transfer effect, while the PDGP in the
X-axis direction weakened the heat transfer effect. Since the pumping power was the same, the FOM of PIGP was greater than that of PDGP. Although AFHS of PIGP with m = 0.1 in the
X-axis direction had the largest FOM, the battery with that had the worst temperature uniformity.
To sum up, the use of AFHS in BTMS will significantly enhance the thermal performance, but it will also increase the flow resistance and pressure drop, resulting in additional energy loss. However, Giuliano et al. [
33] indicated that the parasitic power consumption of a battery pack with liquid cooling was 1200 w–2000 w, while the pump power of a uniform foam aluminium heat sink with 20 ppi was 730 w–1500 w. Thus, the use of foam aluminium heat sink is acceptable. The AFHS of gradient porosity design further reduce the pressure drop and battery temperature difference. In the process of practical application, comprehensive optimisation can be carried out according to specific conditions to achieve the best cooling effect.