Title :
DESA: Dependable, Efficient, Scalable Architecture for Management of Large-Scale Batteries
Author :
Kim, Hahnsang ; Shin, Kang G.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng. & Comput. Sci., Univ. of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA
fDate :
5/1/2012 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Conventional battery management systems (BMSs) for electric vehicles (EVs) are designed in an ad hoc way, causing the supply of EVs to fall behind the market demand. A well-designed and combined hardware-software architecture is essential for the efficient management of a large-scale battery pack that may consists of thousands of battery cells as in Tesla Motors and GM Chevy Volt. We propose a Dependable, Efficient, Scalable Architecture (DESA) that effectively monitors a large number of battery cells, efficiently controls, and reconfigures, if needed, their connection arrangement. DESA supports hierarchical, autonomous management of battery cells, where a global BMS orchestrates a group of local BMSs. A local controller on each local BMS autonomously manages an array of battery cells, and the global controller reconfigures the connectivity of such battery-cell arrays in coordination with the local controllers. Also, DESA allows individual arrays and local BMSs to be selectively powered-off for energy savings. The performance of this energy-saving capability is modeled and evaluated using a Markov chain. Our evaluation results show that DESA effectively tolerates battery-cell failures by an order-of-magnitude-while achieving 7.4 × service cost savings-better than a conventional BMS. This superior performance not only extends the battery life significantly, but also provides the flexibility in supporting diverse electric power demands from a growing number of on-board applications.
Keywords :
Markov processes; ad hoc networks; battery management systems; battery powered vehicles; electric vehicles; secondary cells; BMS; DESA; Markov chain; ad hoc network; autonomous management; battery-cell arrays; battery-cell failure; controller reconfiguration; dependable efficient scalable architecture; diverse electric power demands; electric vehicle; energy saving capability; hardware-software architecture; large-scale battery pack management system; market demand; order-of-magnitude; Arrays; Batteries; Control systems; Monitoring; Temperature measurement; Temperature sensors; Battery cells and packs; battery management system (BMS); electric vehicles; reconfiguration of cell and pack connections; voltage and cell balancing;
Journal_Title :
Industrial Informatics, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TII.2011.2166771