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Point-by-point inscribed sapphire parallel fiber Bragg gratings in a fully multimode system for multiplexed high-temperature sensing

Optics Letters

Shi, Guannan S.; Shurtz, Randy S.; Pickrell, Gary P.; Wang, Anbo W.; Zhu, Yizheng Z.

In this work, we study the point-by-point inscription of sapphire parallel fiber Bragg gratings (sapphire pFBGs) in a fully multimode system. A parallel FBG is shown to be critical in enabling detectable and reliable high-order grating signals. The impacts of modal volume, spatial coherence, and grating location on reflectivity are examined. Three cascaded seventh-order pFBGs are fabricated in one sapphire fiber for wavelength multiplexed temperature sensing. Using a low-cost, fully multimode 850-nm interrogator, reliable measurement up to 1500°C is demonstrated.

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Tritium Fires: Simulation and Safety Assessment

Brown, Alexander B.; Shurtz, Randy S.; Takahashi, Lynelle K.; Coker, Eric N.; Hewson, John C.; Hobbs, Michael L.

This is the Sandia report from a joint NSRD project between Sandia National Labs and Savannah River National Labs. The project involved development of simulation tools and data intended to be useful for tritium operations safety assessment. Tritium is a synthetic isotope of hydrogen that has a limited lifetime, and it is found at many tritium facilities in the form of elemental gas (T2). The most serious risk of reasonable probability in an accident scenario is when the tritium is released and reacts with oxygen to form a water molecule, which is subsequently absorbed into the human body. This tritium oxide is more readily absorbed by the body and therefore represents a limiting factor for safety analysis. The abnormal condition of a fire may result in conversion of the safer T2 inventory to the more hazardous oxidized form. It is this risk that tends to govern the safety protocols. Tritium fire datasets do not exist, so prescriptive safety guidance is largely conservative and reliant on means other than testing to formulate guidelines. This can have a consequence in terms of expensive and/or unnecessary mitigation design, handling protocols, and operational activities. This issue can be addressed through added studies on the behavior of tritium under representative conditions. Due to the hazards associated with the tests, this is being approached mainly from a modeling and simulation standpoint and surrogate testing. This study largely establishes the capability to generate simulation predictions with sufficiently credible characteristics to be accepted for safety guidelines as a surrogate for actual data through a variety of testing and modeling activities.

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LIM1TR: Lithium-Ion Modeling with 1-D Thermal Runaway (V.1.0)

Kurzawski, Andrew K.; Shurtz, Randy S.

LIM1TR (Lithium-Ion Modeling with 1-D Thermal Runaway) is an open-source code that uses the finite volume method to simulate heat transfer and chemical kinetics on a quasi 1-D domain. The target application of this software is to simulate thermal runaway in systems of lithium-ion batteries. The source code for LIM1TR can be found at https://github.com/ajkur/lim1tr. This user guide details the steps required to create and run simulations with LIM1TR starting with setting up the Python environment, generating an input file, and running a simulation. Additional details are provided on the output of LIM1TR as well as extending the code with custom reaction models. This user guide concludes with simple example analyses of common battery thermal runaway scenarios. The corresponding input files and processing scripts can be found in the “Examples” folder in the on-line repository, with select input files included in the appendix of this document.

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Investigating the Role of Energy Density in Thermal Runaway of Lithium-Ion Batteries with Accelerating Rate Calorimetry

Journal of the Electrochemical Society

Lamb, Joshua H.; Torres-Castro, Loraine T.; Hewson, John C.; Shurtz, Randy S.; Preger, Yuliya P.

This work uses accelerating rate calorimetry to evaluate the impact of cell chemistry, state of charge, cell capacity, and ultimately cell energy density on the total energy release and peak heating rates observed during thermal runaway of Li-ion batteries. While the traditional focus has been using calorimetry to compare different chemistries in cells of similar sizes, this work seeks to better understand how applicable small cell data is to understand the thermal runaway behavior of large cells as well as determine if thermal runaway behaviors can be more generally tied to aspects of lithium-ion cells such as total stored energy and specific energy. We have found a strong linear correlation between the total enthalpy of the thermal runaway process and the stored energy of the cell, apparently independent of cell size and state of charge. We have also shown that peak heating rates and peak temperatures reached during thermal runaway events are more closely tied to specific energy, increasing exponentially in the case of peak heating rates.

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From material properties to multiscale modeling to improve lithium-ion energy storage safety

MRS Bulletin

Hewson, John C.; Zhou, Hanwei; Parmananda, Mukul; Shurtz, Randy S.; Mukherjee, Partha P.

Energy storage using lithium-ion cells dominates consumer electronics and is rapidly becoming predominant in electric vehicles and grid-scale energy storage, but the high energy densities attained lead to the potential for release of this stored chemical energy. This article introduces some of the paths by which this energy might be unintentionally released, relating cell material properties to the physical processes associated with this potential release. The selected paths focus on the anode–electrolyte and cathode–electrolyte interactions that are of typical concern for current and near-future systems. Relevant material processes include bulk phase transformations, bulk diffusion, surface reactions, transport limitations across insulating passivation layers, and the potential for more complex material structures to enhance safety. We also discuss the development, parameterization, and application of predictive models for this energy release and give examples of the application of these models to gain further insight into the development of safer energy storage systems.

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Predicting cell-to-cell failure propagation and limits of propagation in lithium-ion cell stacks

Proceedings of the Combustion Institute

Kurzawski, Andrew K.; Torres-Castro, Loraine T.; Shurtz, Randy S.; Lamb, Joshua H.; Hewson, John C.

Thermal runaway of Li-ion batteries is a risk that is magnified when stacks of lithium-ion cells are used for large scale energy storage. When limits of propagation can be identified so that systems can be designed to prevent large scale cascading failure even if a failure does occur, these systems will be safer. The prediction of cell-to-cell failure propagation and the propagation limits in lithium-ion cell stacks were studied to better understand and identify safe designs. A thermal-runaway model was considered based on recent developments in thermochemical source terms. Propagating failure was characterized by temperatures above which calorimetry data is available. Results showed high temperature propagating failure predictions are too rapid unless an intra-particle diffusion limit is included, introducing a Damköhler number limiter into the rate expression. This new model form was evaluated against cell-to-cell failure propagation where the end cell of a stack is forced into thermal runaway through a nail-induced short circuit. Limits of propagation for this configuration are identified. Results showed cell-to-cell propagation predictions are consistent with measurements over a range of cell states of charge and with the introduction of metal plates between cells to add system heat capacity representative of structural members. This consistency extends from scenarios where propagation occurs through scenarios where propagation is prevented.

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A Thermodynamic Reassessment of Lithium-Ion Battery Cathode Calorimetry

Journal of the Electrochemical Society

Shurtz, Randy S.

This work demonstrates how staged heat release from layered metal oxide cathodes in the presence of organic electrolytes can be predicted from basic thermodynamic properties. These prediction methods for heat release are an advancement compared to typical modeling approaches for thermal runaway in lithium-ion batteries, which tend to rely exclusively on calorimetry measurements of battery components. These calculations generate useful new insights when compared to calorimetry measurements for lithium cobalt oxide (LCO) as well as the most common varieties of nickel manganese cobalt oxide (NMC) and nickel cobalt aluminum oxide (NCA). Accurate trends in heat release with varying state of charge are predicted for all of these cathode materials. These results suggest that thermodynamic calculations utilizing a recently published database of properties are broadly applicable for predicting decomposition behavior of layered metal oxide cathodes. Aspects of literature calorimetry measurements relevant to thermal runaway modeling are identified and classified as thermodynamic or kinetic effects. The calorimetry measurements reviewed in this work will be useful for development of a new generation of thermal runaway models targeting applications where accurate maximum cell temperatures are required to predict cascading cell-to-cell propagation rates.

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Review - Materials Science Predictions of Thermal Runaway in Layered Metal-Oxide Cathodes: A Review of Thermodynamics

Journal of the Electrochemical Society

Shurtz, Randy S.; Hewson, John C.

Accurate models of thermal runaway in lithium-ion batteries require quantitative knowledge of heat release during thermochemical processes. A capability to predict at least some aspects of heat release for a wide variety of candidate materials a priori is desirable. This work establishes a framework for predicting staged heat release from basic thermodynamic properties for layered metal-oxide cathodes. Available enthalpies relevant to thermal decomposition of layered metal-oxide cathodes are reviewed and assembled in this work to predict potential heat release in the presence of alkyl-carbonate electrolytes with varying state of charge. Cathode delithiation leads to a less stable metal oxide subject to phase transformations including oxygen release when heated. We recommend reaction enthalpies and show the thermal consequences of metal-oxide phase changes and solvent oxidation within the battery are of comparable magnitudes. Heats of reaction are related in this work to typical observations reported in the literature for species characterization and calorimetry. The methods and assembled databases of formation and reaction enthalpies in this work lay groundwork a new generation of thermal runaway models based on fundamental material thermodynamics, capable of predicting accurate maximum cell temperatures and hence cascading cell-to-cell propagation rates.

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From calorimetry measurements to furthering mechanistic understanding and control of thermal abuse in lithium-ion cells

Journal of the Electrochemical Society

Shurtz, Randy S.; Preger, Yuliya P.; Torres-Castro, Loraine T.; Lamb, Joshua H.; Hewson, John C.; Ferreira, Summer R.

Lithium-ion battery safety is prerequisite for applications from consumer electronics to grid energy storage. Cell and component-level calorimetry studies are central to safety evaluations. Qualitative empirical comparisons have been indispensable in understanding decomposition behavior. More systematic calorimetry studies along with more comprehensive measurements and reporting can lead to more quantitative mechanistic understanding. This mechanistic understanding can facilitate improved designs and predictions for scenarios that are difficult to access experimentally, such as system-level failures. Recommendations are made to improve usability of calorimetry results in mechanistic understanding. From our perspective, this path leads to a more mature science of battery safety.

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Predicting High-Temperature Decomposition of Lithiated Graphite: Part I. Review of Phenomena and a Comprehensive Model

Journal of the Electrochemical Society

Shurtz, Randy S.; Engerer, Jeffrey D.; Hewson, John C.

Heat release that leads to thermal runaway of lithium-ion batteries begins with decomposition reactions associated with lithiated graphite. We broadly review the observed phenomena related to lithiated graphite electrodes and develop a comprehensive model that predicts with a single parameter set and with reasonable accuracy measurements over the available temperature range with a range of graphite particle sizes. The model developed in this work uses a standardized total heat release and takes advantage of a revised dependence of reaction rates and the tunneling barrier on specific surface area. The reaction extent is limited by inadequate electrolyte or lithium. Calorimetry measurements show that heat release from the reaction between lithiated graphite and electrolyte accelerates above ~200°C, and the model addresses this without introducing additional chemical reactions. This method assumes that the electron-tunneling barrier through the solid electrolyte interphase (SEI) grows initially and then becomes constant at some critical magnitude, which allows the reaction to accelerate as the temperature rises by means of its activation energy. Phenomena that could result in the upper limit on the tunneling barrier are discussed. The model predictions with two candidate activation energies are evaluated through comparisons to calorimetry data, and recommendations are made for optimal parameters.

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Total Hemispherical Emissivity of Metals Applicable to Radiant Heat Testing

Shurtz, Randy S.

Total hemispherical emissivities are a commonly used property in radiative heat transfer analysis. Measurements made in the course of testing become far more useful to thermal analysts if they are compiled with a sufficient level of detail, and summarized in a manner that allows the most appropriate value or trend to be located quickly. This report collects emissivity measurements from recent years, made in the course of testing metallic surfaces at Sandia's Radiant Heat Test Facility, and compares them to a selection of previous summary documents. These measurements are organized by material type, surface finish, and degree of oxidation. The comparisons also consider the temperature dependence of total hemispherical emissivity. Materials considered include Inconel 600, SS304, 17-4PH SS, silicon carbide, and aluminum alloys. A limited selection of high-temperature paints and other surface coatings are also considered. Recommendations are made for frequency of measurements and level of detail in reporting emissivities in future test series. A more limited scope is recommended for the use of high-temperature paints at Sandia's Radiant Heat Test Facility; pre-oxidation of Inconel and stainless steel surfaces is preferred in many circumstances. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Thanks are due to Fredd Rodriguez and Jim Nakos for promoting this work for the benefit of their own programs and many others. The greatest share of the data in this report was provided by Jill Suo-Anttila, Jim Nakos, Walt Gill, and Burl Donaldson. The thoughtful suggestions of Brantley Mills on making the summaries more useful to thermal analysts are greatly appreciated. Thoughtful reviews and assistance with formatting from Ethan Zepper and Monica Bigney were also very valuable.

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Modeling thermal runaway in Lithium-Ion packs as a function of scale and heat source

10th U.S. National Combustion Meeting

Shurtz, Randy S.; Hewson, John C.

As deployment of large-scale Li-Ion battery modules is contemplated, there is a need to understand the propensity for thermal runaway in individual cells and the large-scale thermal failure at the pack level. Sources of thermal energy can lead to runaway including short circuits (internal or external), exothermic processes from overcharge of imbalanced cells, the external environment, and other factors. With battery modules consisting of hundreds or even thousands of cells, it will be necessary to design tolerance to local heat release, regardless of the source. This work presents a chemistry-independent framework for analyzing and modeling thermal runaway that will be demonstrated by applying it to thermal runaway (ignition) and cascading failure (propagation).

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63 Results
63 Results