The Auto Channel
The Largest Independent Automotive Research Resource
The Largest Independent Automotive Research Resource
Official Website of the New Car Buyer

OSC RELEASE: Battery pack modeling & simulation key to hybrid success

Good morning!

The ongoing catastrophe of the oil spill in the Gulf underscores more
than ever the need for reliable, alternative power systems for America's
automobiles. 

One option, the Plug-in Hybrid Electric Vehicle (PHEV), uses a battery
pack composed of many parallel strings of individual battery cells
connected together to deliver the performance and range required for the
PHEV to be commercially viable. To provide a foundation for developing
more efficient PHEV battery management systems, Ohio State University
researcher BJ Yurkovich recently used Ohio Supercomputer Center modeling
resources to characterize the behavior and characteristics of the
individual cells in a battery pack. 

A release with images is attached in Word and PDF formats, as well as
copied below in plain text. High-resolution versions of the images are
available by visiting the OSC website and clicking on the images at:
http://www.osc.edu/press/releases/2010/yurkovichBattery.shtml .

Please send me an email or call me if you have questions about this
release or the Ohio Supercomputer Center in general.

Regards,

Jamie Abel

__________________________________

NEWS RELEASE
For Immediate Release: June 2, 2010
Contact: 	Kathryn Kelley, Director of Outreach, Ohio Supercomputer
Center, 614-292-6067, kkelley@osc.edu
	Jamie Abel, Director of Media and Communications, Ohio
Supercomputer Center, 614-292-6495, jabel@osc.edu 

Battery pack modeling & simulation key to PHEV success
Study leverages supercomputer to improve management systems

Columbus, Ohio (June 2, 2010) – To help develop more effective
battery management systems for plug-in hybrid vehicles, an Ohio State
University researcher programmed a supercomputer to simulate the
characteristics and behavior of individual lithium-ion batteries as they
are arranged in an automotive battery pack. 

A vehicle’s battery management system (BMS) monitors and protects the
battery pack, prolongs its life and keeps it ready to deliver full power
when called upon. The BMS equalizes the voltage drawn from each of the
cells and interfaces with other on-board systems, such as engine
management, climate control, communications and safety. 

The power needs for extended all-electric operation of plug-in hybrid
electric vehicles (PHEVs) require much more on-board energy than
typically provided by the nickel-metal-hydride batteries found in
standard gasoline-electric hybrids. According to experts, PHEVs will be
commercially viable and mass-produced once engineers refine the
lithium-ion battery and management systems needed to support the range
and power demanded by consumers.

The current engineering solution is to link several parallel strings of
lithium-ion battery cells within a battery module and to link several
modules into larger battery packs. However, until now, these
configurations had not been empirically tested to determine how the
state-of-charge (SoC) deviation – and therefore battery life – is
affected by changing temperature and energy load on individual cells.

Benjamin “BJ�?? Yurkovich, a graduate research fellow at the Center
for Automotive Research (CAR) at The Ohio State University, recently
collaborated with the Ohio Supercomputer Center (OSC) to better
understand the characteristics and behavior of large battery packs. He
first identified the model parameters of individual battery cells from
various makers by using a 72-node cluster computer at CAR that he had
helped construct. 

“Each cell in a battery pack is unique,�?? said Yurkovich, who earned
a bachelor’s degree in computer science last year and will add a
master’s degree in mechanical engineering from OSU this summer.
“They vary in manufacturing variability, cell history and existing
conditions, such as temperature, current and state-of-charge. These
factors must be considered by a battery management system to achieve
optimum voltage equalization.�??

Yurkovich turned to The MathWorks’ numeric computation and
visualization software, known as MATLAB. He devised a battery model
based on the experimental battery cell data and simulation algorithms to
analyze voltage, current and SoC deviation of parallel strings of
batteries. 

With assistance through OSC’s Remote MATLAB Services (RMS), Yurkovich
transitioned his MATLAB scripts to run on 200 nodes of OSC’s IBM
Cluster 1350 supercomputer. Nicknamed the Glenn Cluster, OSC’s
flagship system features 9,500 cores, 24 terabytes of memory and a peak
computational capability of 75 teraflops – which translates to 75
trillion calculations per second. 

“The simulations considered two different battery pack
configurations, profiles for both hybrid and plug-in hybrid vehicles,
three different temperatures, two different variations of internal
resistance and capacity, three different states-of-charge and three
different variations for the standard deviation,�?? Yurkovich explained.
“Each simulation contained 10,000 parameter-varied individual pack
Monte Carlo calculations.�??

In less than eight hours, the Glenn Cluster computed more than a
million successful individual iterations of Yurkovich’s model. He
estimated that it would have taken a year and a half to run his
algorithms on his desktop computer and more than a week to run them on
the much smaller CAR cluster computer. 

“BJ was one of the Center’s first RMS users and gave the staff
valuable feedback on the user interface,�?? said David Hudak, Ph.D.,
director of HPC Engineering at OSC. “RMS allowed him to validate his
MATLAB scripts locally and then execute production runs on the Glenn
Cluster without leaving his desktop computer’s MATLAB workspace. In
addition, we found that some of his processing was really I/O intensive
and benefited greatly from our parallel file system.�??

With the knowledge gleaned from his simulations, Yurkovich was able to
use metrics he defined to analyze the SoC deviation, voltage and
amperage of individual cells to provide a foundation for the design of
more intelligent battery management system design in PHEV battery packs.
Down the road, he intends to develop a methodology to model and simulate
heat generated by various battery pack configurations.

Yurkovich also serves as the chief technology officer of Juice
Technologies, a leading provider of Plug Smart products and technologies
that enable the intelligent charging of batteries and PHEVs, as well as
products to optimize home and business energy use. In addition to
battery technology and battery management systems, he specializes in
applied software, embedded systems and data acquisition, along with
engineering specific end-user application development. 

XXX

Editor’s note: For high-resolution versions of the images in this
release, click on the thumbnails at
http://www.osc.edu/press/releases/2010/yurkovichBattery.shtml .

The Ohio Supercomputer Center (OSC) is a catalytic partner of Ohio
universities and industries, providing a reliable high performance
computing and high performance networking infrastructure for a diverse
statewide/regional community including education, academic research,
industry, and state government. Funded by the Ohio Board of Regents, OSC
promotes and stimulates computational research and education in order to
act as a key enabler for the state's aspirations in advanced technology,
information systems, and advanced industries. For more, visit
www.osc.edu.

The OSU Center for Automotive Research (CAR) was established in 1991 as
an interdisciplinary center to focus on research, technology and
education. CAR serves as a catalyst to leveraging federal and industrial
resources and programs towards educating a new generation of automotive
system engineers with a deep understanding of the technologies
underlying advanced automotive systems. For more, visit
http://car.osu.edu . 





Mr. Jamie Abel, APR
Media and Communications Director
Ohio Supercomputer Center
1224 Kinnear Road
Columbus, Ohio 43212-1163

Office: 614-292-6495
Mobile: 614-886-1813
Internet: jabel@osc.edu

Learn more about OSC at http://www.osc.edu .