Title: Performance of carbon-fiber-containing LiFePO4 cathodes for high-power applications
Abstract: This paper describes the fabrication and testing of LiFePO4 cathodes for hybrid vehicle applications. The cathodes contained combinations of three different carbon conductivity additives: vapor-grown carbon fibers (CF), carbon black (CB) and graphite (GR). Cells of different carbon composition and active-material loading were tested with 10 s charge and discharge pulses and found under certain conditions to meet the HEV power goals for the U.S. Advanced Battery Consortium. With all other factors held constant, cathodes with a mixture of CF + CB were found to have the best power-performance, followed by cells containing CF only and then by CB + GR. Thus, the use of carbon fibers as conductive additive was found to improve the power performance of cells compared to the baseline (CB + GR). The enhanced electrode performance due to the fibers also allows an increase in energy density while still meeting power goals. The best specific-power performance for each of the compositions investigated was found to occur around an active material loading of 1 mAh cm−2. About one-third of the available energy was lost to irreversible processes when cells were pulse-charged or discharged at the maximum rate allowed by voltage-cutoff constraints.
Publication Year: 2006
Publication Date: 2006-11-01
Language: en
Type: article
Indexed In: ['crossref']
Access and Citation
Cited By Count: 80
AI Researcher Chatbot
Get quick answers to your questions about the article from our AI researcher chatbot