Application of force in electrochemical cells
US-9105938-B2 · Aug 11, 2015 · US
US11489348B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-11489348-B2 |
| Application number | US-201916527903-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Jul 31, 2019 |
| Priority date | Jul 31, 2018 |
| Publication date | Nov 1, 2022 |
| Grant date | Nov 1, 2022 |
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A battery management system comprising: at least one battery comprising two or more sets of cells, each set of cells comprising one or more cells; a multiplexing switch apparatus connected to each set of cells; and at least one controller configured to use the multiplexing switch apparatus to selectively discharge the sets of cells based on at least one criterion. A battery pack comprising: at least one battery comprising two or more sets of cells, each set of cells comprising one or more cells; and an integrated switching control system comprising at least one switch connected to each set of cells, wherein the integrated switching control system is configured to control the at least one switch to discharge the sets of cells sequentially or selectively based on at least one criterion. A battery management method or a battery pack control method.
Opening claim text (preview).
What is claimed is: 1. A battery management system comprising: at least one battery comprising two or more sets of cells, each set of cells comprising one or more cells; a multiplexing switch apparatus connected to each set of cells; and at least one controller configured to use the multiplexing switch apparatus to selectively discharge the sets of cells at a discharging rate at least 2 times higher than a charging rate of the sets of cells; wherein for a given cycle, each cell is discharged once before any cell is discharged twice. 2. The battery management system of claim 1 , wherein the discharging rate is 4 times higher than the charging rate. 3. The battery management system of claim 1 , wherein the at least one controller is configured to temporally overlap the discharge of the sets of cells. 4. The battery management system of claim 1 , wherein the at least one controller is configured to continue to provide power from the sets of cells during switching between different sets. 5. The battery management system of claim 1 , wherein at least one controller is configured to use the multiplexing switch apparatus to apply the charging rate of the sets of cells prior to the discharging rate. 6. A battery pack comprising: at least one battery comprising two or more sets of cells, each set of cells comprising one or more cells; and an integrated switching control system comprising at least one switch connected to each set of cells, wherein: the integrated switching control system is configured to control the at least one switch to discharge the sets of cells at a discharging rate at least 2 times higher than a charging rate of the sets of cells, and for a given cycle, each cell is discharged once before any cell is discharged twice. 7. The battery pack of claim 6 , wherein the discharging rate is 4 times higher than the charging rate. 8. The battery pack of claim 6 , wherein the integrated switching control system is configured to control the at least one switch to temporally overlap the discharge of the sets of cells. 9. The battery pack of claim 6 , wherein the integrated switching control system is configured to control the at least one switch to continue to provide power from the sets of cells during switching between different sets. 10. A battery management method comprising: using a multiplexing switch apparatus, which is connected to two or more sets of cells of at least one battery, to selectively discharge each set of cells at a discharging rate at least 2 times higher than a charging rate of the sets of cells, wherein: each set of cells comprises one or more cells, and for a given cycle, each cell is discharged once before any cell is discharged twice. 11. The battery management method of claim 10 , wherein the discharging rate is 4 times higher than the charging rate. 12. The battery management method of claim 10 , further comprising temporally overlapping discharge of sets of cells. 13. The battery mannagement method of claim 10 , further comprising continuing to provide power from the sets of cells during switching between different sets. 14. An electrochemical cell controlled by the battery management method of claim 10 . 15. A rechargeable battery comprising the electrochemical cell of claim 14 . 16. A vehicle comprising the rechargeable battery of claim 15 . 17. A vehicle comprising the electrochemical cell of claim 14 .
with circuits adapted for supplying loads from the battery · CPC title
Sequential battery discharge in systems with a plurality of batteries · CPC title
Active balancing, e.g. using capacitor-based, inductor-based or DC-DC converters · CPC title
Charging or discharging characterised by the power electronics converter · CPC title
Charging or discharging for charge maintenance, battery initiation or rejuvenation · CPC title
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