september 14, 2011 david speth, senior engineer-materials email: dspeth@ewi

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September 14, 2011 David Speth, Senior Engineer- Materials Email: [email protected] Phone: 614.688.5162 Battery Assembly: Joining Dissimilar Materials

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Battery Assembly: Joining Dissimilar Materials. September 14, 2011 David Speth, Senior Engineer-Materials Email: [email protected] Phone: 614.688.5162. Outline. Developing EV Market Joining Issues for Vehicle Batteries Project with OSU Center for Automotive Research - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: September 14, 2011 David Speth, Senior Engineer-Materials Email:   dspeth@ewi

September 14, 2011David Speth, Senior Engineer-MaterialsEmail: [email protected]: 614.688.5162

Battery Assembly: Joining Dissimilar Materials

Page 2: September 14, 2011 David Speth, Senior Engineer-Materials Email:   dspeth@ewi

Outline

Developing EV Market Joining Issues for Vehicle Batteries

─ Project with OSU Center for Automotive Research Ultrasonic Metal Welding Laser Welding Resistance Spot Welding Nondestructive Evaluation Summary and Acknowledgements

Page 3: September 14, 2011 David Speth, Senior Engineer-Materials Email:   dspeth@ewi

2011 Commercial EV and PHEV

Chevrolet VoltNissan Leaf

Tesla Roadster

GM Plans 50,000+ Volts

Nissan plans 200,000+ EVs

Tesla working on Model S

Page 4: September 14, 2011 David Speth, Senior Engineer-Materials Email:   dspeth@ewi

EVs 2011-2014Manufacturer Vehicle

Audi eTron EV (2012); PHEV (2014)

BMW MiniE EV (2012); City Car (2013)

BYD E6 EV (2012); F3DM PHEV (2012)

Coda Sedan EV (2011)

Chrysler/Fiat Fiat 500 EV (2012)

Fisker Karma EV (2011)

Ford Fusion HEV (commercial); Transit Connect EV (commercial); Escape HEV (commercial); Focus EV (2011); CMax PHEV (2013)

GM Volt PHEV (commercial); Ampera PHEV (2011); Cadillac SRX HEV (2012)

Honda Insight HEV (commercial); Civic HEV (commercial); Fit EV (2012)

Mazda Mazda 2 EV (2012)

Mitsubishi iMEV EV (2011)

Nissan Leaf EV (commercial); other platforms

Tesla Model S EV (2012);

Toyota Prius HEV (commercial); Prius PHEV (2012); RAV4 HEV (2012)

Volkswagen Eup EV (2013); Gold EV (2013); Jetta EV (2013)

Page 5: September 14, 2011 David Speth, Senior Engineer-Materials Email:   dspeth@ewi

Vehicle Electrification Challenge

Scale factor (size, capacity)─ Cell phone 4 W─ Laptop 80 W─ HEV 1,500 W─ PHEV 10,000 W─ EV 45,000 W

Design Life/Life Cycle Cost─ Cell phone 12-24

months─ Laptop 12-18 months─ HEV, PHEV, EV >120 months

New demands require new manufacturing industry

─ Working environment─ State-of-charge window─ Rapid charge and discharge

Relative Power

1

10

100

1000

10000

100000

Cell phone Laptop HEV PHEV EV

Application

Po

wer

(W

)

Page 6: September 14, 2011 David Speth, Senior Engineer-Materials Email:   dspeth@ewi

Cells to Modules to Packs Can be 100s to 1000s of electrical joints

per pack─ Bus bars─ Interconnects─ Collectors

Pouch/cell seal Voltage sensor leads Balance of plant

─ Motor connections─ Thermal management─ Battery management

Page 7: September 14, 2011 David Speth, Senior Engineer-Materials Email:   dspeth@ewi

Joining Issues No single process dominates

─ Ultrasonic─ Laser─ Resistance─ Soldering─ Adhesives

Complex material combinations─ Copper (native, plated)─ Aluminum─ Nickel─ Steel─ Dissimilar combinations

Need─ Speed─ High reliability─ Durability─ Low heat input─ NDE approach

Page 8: September 14, 2011 David Speth, Senior Engineer-Materials Email:   dspeth@ewi

Substrate Comparison

Property Cu Al NiThermal conductivity (W/m-°K) 390 229 70

Melting point (°C) 1080 652 1430

Thermal expansion coefficient (ppm/°C) 17.3 24.1 12

Heat capacity (J/kg-°C) 386 900 456

Absorption (at 1064 nm%) 2-5 8 32

Conductivity (106 S/m) 57 34 18

Resistivity (10-6 -cm) 2.11 2.87 9.5

Specific heat (J/kg/°K) 386 238 455

Latent heat of fusion (J/g) 205 388 298

Electrochemical potential (V) 0.34 -1.66 -0.257

Thermal Diffusivity (cm2/s) 1.14 0.91 0.11

Property mismatch makes direct welding difficult

Page 9: September 14, 2011 David Speth, Senior Engineer-Materials Email:   dspeth@ewi

OSU CAR EWI Welding Study

Process screening study for module/pack assembly─ Laser, resistance and ultrasonic metal welding─ Copper, aluminum, nickel, nickel-plated copper (electro- and

electroless-)─ Foil (0.001 in.); tab (0.005 in.); bus (0.032 in.)

Mechanical and electrical properties─ Shear strength─ Peel strength (T peel)─ Resistance/conductivity/thermal profile─ Metallography

Non-destructive evaluation/process monitoring Electrical cycling (OSU CAR) Mechanical fatigue (Phase 2)

Page 10: September 14, 2011 David Speth, Senior Engineer-Materials Email:   dspeth@ewi

Ultrasonic Metal Welding (UMW)

Oxides, Contaminants

Asperities

Advantages─ Solid-state, low heat input─ Welds through contaminants─ Low power─ No filler or cover gas─ Fast─ Excellent for Al, Ni, Cu

Disadvantages─ Unfamiliar process─ Lap joints, thin sheet only─ Deforms parts─ Large weld size─ Requires open access─ Noise─ Substrate-horn adhesion

Static Force

Sonotrode

Vibration

Workpieces

Anvil

Weld Zone

Page 11: September 14, 2011 David Speth, Senior Engineer-Materials Email:   dspeth@ewi

USMW Previous Results

No Cu-Cu bonding observed Ni-plating broken or thinned in

some areas, but never removed Profile of the horn and anvil are

important

Al 1100-0

Ni-plated Cu 110

Ni-plated Cu 110

Ni-plated Cu 110

Ni-plated Cu 110

Ni-plated Cu 110

Ni-plated Cu 110

Ni-plated Cu 110

Aluminum 1100

Ni-plated Cu 110

Page 12: September 14, 2011 David Speth, Senior Engineer-Materials Email:   dspeth@ewi

USMW OSU Preliminary Results

Tab to Bus─ Aluminum tabs to all bus materials (Al, Cu, and Ni-plated Cu) result

in weld joints with similar mechanical strength─ Ni-plated copper tabs to all bus materials-lower than expected peel

strength─ Copper tab to aluminum bus shows low peel but high tensile

strength Tab to Tab

─ Aluminum and copper join well─ Aluminum to other substrates less successful

Foil to tab─ USW can easily join multiple thin layers in a single step

Page 13: September 14, 2011 David Speth, Senior Engineer-Materials Email:   dspeth@ewi

USMW Tab to Tab

Peel Shear

Page 14: September 14, 2011 David Speth, Senior Engineer-Materials Email:   dspeth@ewi

Laser Welding

Lasers use a focused beam of light to create welds

Generic Set-Up for Direct Beam Laser Welding

Keyhole Mode Welding

Conduction Mode Welding

Page 15: September 14, 2011 David Speth, Senior Engineer-Materials Email:   dspeth@ewi

LW Advantages/Disadvantages

Advantages Precise location of small welds Low heat input Minimal distortion High speed Non-contact Can weld “shapes”

Disadvantages Laser cost $$ Need line-of-sight access Requires good fit-up, tooling Heating starts on the surface Limited weld penetration

especially on copper Makes fusion welds Welds very narrow Eye safety hazard

Nickel Plated Copper on Copper-Shaped Weld

Page 16: September 14, 2011 David Speth, Senior Engineer-Materials Email:   dspeth@ewi

LW Test Specimens

Laser Welds

Page 17: September 14, 2011 David Speth, Senior Engineer-Materials Email:   dspeth@ewi

LW Sample Cross Sections

Nickel-Electroplated Copper on Aluminum

Copper on Nickel

Aluminum on Nickel-Electroplated Copper-Voids

Aluminum welded to other metals produced the weakest welds

Incomplete mixing of metals

Page 18: September 14, 2011 David Speth, Senior Engineer-Materials Email:   dspeth@ewi

Resistance Spot Welding

Resistive heating of workpieces or electrodes

─ Common─ Adaptable─ Low cycle time and heat input─ Self-fixturing─ Self-monitoring equipment

Block diagram of AC welding system.

Page 19: September 14, 2011 David Speth, Senior Engineer-Materials Email:   dspeth@ewi

RSW Variants Solid state is preferred for

battery assembly Advantages

─ Rapid cycle time─ Low heat input─ Multiple welds easy─ Process monitoring possible

Disadvantages for batteries

─ Dissimilar metals ─ Low resistance─ High conductivity─ Current path can limit geometry─ Access can be limited

Electrodes or Welding Tips

Spot Weld

Page 20: September 14, 2011 David Speth, Senior Engineer-Materials Email:   dspeth@ewi

RSW Process Development

Produce a weld matrix to determine process limits

─ Current─ Time─ Force

Acceptance requirements─ Application defined─ Weld strength─ Weld size

ExpulsionAcceptableNuggets

Small Nuggets

Minimum Nugget Diameter

Weld Current

Weld Current

ExpulsionLevel

TimeA

Smaller“Brittle” Nuggets

AcceptableNuggets

LobeCurve

Nu

gg

et

Dia

me

ter

We

ld T

ime

Time A

Page 21: September 14, 2011 David Speth, Senior Engineer-Materials Email:   dspeth@ewi

RSW Tensile Shear Results

Weld force and current important for Al and Cu

Force and current become less important for Ni and Ni-plate

Weld time less important for al and cu becomes important for Ni plate

Page 22: September 14, 2011 David Speth, Senior Engineer-Materials Email:   dspeth@ewi

RSW Peel Test Results

Force, current, and time equally important for Al and Cu

Weld time becomes more important for Ni and Ni plate

Page 23: September 14, 2011 David Speth, Senior Engineer-Materials Email:   dspeth@ewi

Non Destructive Evaluation

ActivationEnergySource

Good Fusion

ActivationEnergy

ActivationEnergySource

Poor Fusion

ActivationEnergy

Can excite welds with external source.

Page 24: September 14, 2011 David Speth, Senior Engineer-Materials Email:   dspeth@ewi

NDE X-Ray vs Thermal Signature

Good WeldBad Weld

X-ray image showing weld nuggets

(controlled specimen)

Page 25: September 14, 2011 David Speth, Senior Engineer-Materials Email:   dspeth@ewi

Summary Batteries for motive power have numerous joints

─ Material combinations increase complexity Electrical testing is not sufficient to determine if a weld is good

─ Conductivity/resistance good even if weld is weak Several processes are used

─ Ultrasonic metal welding─ Excellent for Al, Cu, Ni─ Good for multiple layers─ Need to complete metallurgy and data analysis

─ Laser welding─ Flexible─ May be limited to like-to-like welds─ Need to look for intermetallic compound formation

─ Resistance Welding─ Most combinations can be welded─ Parameter selection can be based on like-to-like results─ Need to finish metallurgical analysis

Nondestructive evaluation approaches can be used for process development and perhaps production

Page 26: September 14, 2011 David Speth, Senior Engineer-Materials Email:   dspeth@ewi

Buckeye Bullet 2.5 August 2010

EWI Laser Work Cell Assembled Battery Packs

Buckeye Bullet “Hood Up”

Battery

New international land-speed record for battery-powered vehicles of 307.66 mph

http://blog.buckeyebullet.com/

Over 1500 Batteries

Page 27: September 14, 2011 David Speth, Senior Engineer-Materials Email:   dspeth@ewi

Acknowledgements

Support of the Department of Energy through the Ohio State University Center for Automotive Research─ DOE Award DE-EE0004188 ─ National Center of Excellence for Energy Storage 168.10

Team effort─ Tim Frech─ Mitch Matheny─ Jay Eastman─ Sam Lewis─ Warren Peterson─ Barb Christel─ Nancy Porter─ Mike Ryan

Page 28: September 14, 2011 David Speth, Senior Engineer-Materials Email:   dspeth@ewi

Questions?Dr. David SpethSenior Engineer-MaterialsEmail: [email protected]: 614.688.5162