Methods and Apparatuses for Paste Production and Application on Electrode Substrates for Lead Acid Batteries
20240204170 ยท 2024-06-20
Inventors
- Maureen Elizabeth Sherrick (Rolling Prairie, IN, US)
- Douglas G. Wilson (St. Charles, MO, US)
- Mark Thomas (Cupertino, CA)
Cpc classification
Y02E60/10
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
International classification
Abstract
A system to create a cell for a monopole or bipole lead acid battery includes a paster to produce wet paste, a first carrier structure to receive the wet paste, and a second carrier structure to receive an electrode substrate. A combining station combines the first carrier structure and corresponding wet paste and the second carrier structure and corresponding electrode substrate into an assembly. An ultrasonic welding system receives the assembly and provides mechanical pressure and ultrasonic energy to the assembly. A removal station via which to remove at least one of the first and second carrier structures to create a modified assembly.
Claims
1. A system for creating a cell for a monopole or bipole lead acid battery, comprising: a paster to produce wet paste; a first carrier structure to receive the wet paste; a second carrier structure to receive an electrode substrate; a combining station at which to combine the first carrier structure and corresponding wet paste and the second carrier structure and corresponding electrode substrate into an assembly; an ultrasonic welding system to receive the assembly and provide mechanical pressure and ultrasonic energy to the assembly; and a removal station via which to remove at least one of the first and second carrier structures to create a modified assembly.
2. The system of claim 1, wherein the paster to produce wet paste comprises a paster to produce a first layer of wet paste and a second layer of wet paste different than the first layer of wet paste; wherein the first carrier structure to receive the wet paste comprises a carrier structure to receive the first layer of paste; the system further comprising a third carrier structure to receive the second layer of wet paste; wherein the combining station at which to combine the first carrier structure and corresponding wet paste and the second carrier structure and corresponding electrode substrate into an assembly comprises the combining station at which to combine the first carrier structure and corresponding first layer of wet paste, the third carrier structure and the corresponding second layer of wet paste, and the second carrier structure and corresponding electrode substrate into the assembly.
3. A method for creating a cell for a monopole or bipole lead acid battery, comprising: producing, via a paster, a wet paste; receiving at a first carrier structure the wet paste; receiving at a second carrier structure an electrode substrate; combining at a combining station the first carrier structure and corresponding wet paste and the second carrier structure and corresponding electrode substrate into an assembly; applying mechanical pressure and ultrasonic energy via an ultrasonic welding system to the assembly; and removing via a removing station at least one of the first and second carrier structures to create a modified assembly.
4. The method of claim 3, wherein producing, via the paster, the wet paste comprises producing, via the paster, a first layer of wet paste and a second layer of wet paste different than the first layer of wet paste; wherein receiving at the first carrier structure the wet paste comprises receiving at the carrier structure first layer of paste; the method further comprising receiving via the third carrier structure the second layer of wet paste; wherein combining at the combining station the first carrier structure and corresponding wet paste and the second carrier structure and corresponding electrode substrate into an assembly comprises combining at the combining station the first carrier structure and corresponding first layer of wet paste, the third carrier structure and the corresponding second layer of wet paste, and the second carrier structure and corresponding electrode substrate into the assembly.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0006] Embodiments are illustrated by way of example, and not by way of limitation, and will be more fully understood with reference to the following detailed description when considered in connection with the figures in which:
[0007]
[0008]
[0009]
[0010]
[0011]
[0012]
[0013]
[0014]
[0015]
[0016]
[0017]
[0018]
[0019]
[0020]
[0021]
[0022]
[0023]
[0024]
[0025]
[0026]
[0027]
[0028]
[0029]
[0030]
[0031]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0032] Embodiments of the invention generally improve the interface contact between the paste and the electrode substrate in monopole and bipole lead acid batteries. Embodiments employ methods in an electrode (plate) making manufacturing process that scale to high volume/low-cost production and improve paste formulations to enable superior adhesion and utilization of the active material.
[0033] Advantages of embodiments of the invention include an improved interface between the electrode substrate and the paste, resulting in an improved cycle life, reduced internal resistance, improved active material utilization including higher volumetric and gravimetric energy density, and improved dynamic charge acceptance enabled by paste filling of convoluted surfaces with high surface area.
[0034] With reference to
[0035] Station 1: A paster (a means of producing paste, either manually or automated) produces an amount of wet paste at step 305. The paste may be sectioned or segmented into desired dimensions.
[0036] Station 2: One or more sections or segments of paste are placed at step 310 into a first carrier structure, referred to herein as carrier 400. With reference to
[0037] Station 3: An electrode substrate, e.g., electrode 100 or 200, to which the paste is to be applied, is first inspected and any debris or defects corrected at step 315.
[0038] Station 4: With reference to
[0039] Station 5: Carrier 400 and Carrier 500 are positioned at step 325 so the paste 415 is brought into contact with the surface of electrode substrate 100, 200 to make assembly 600 depicted in
[0040] Station 6: an ultrasonic system 700, such as shown in
[0041] Station 7: after assembly 600 has been processed at station 6, it is moved to station 7 to prepare for curing, at step 335. The operations 335 performed at station 7 depend on the type of carrier 400 used.
[0042] Stations 8 and 9: the modified assembly 905 is placed in an oven to be cured at step 340, after which it can be stored at step 345.
[0043] According to embodiments of the invention, the exemplary manufacturing paste process depicted in the flowchart 300 of
[0044] By applying ultrasound and mechanical pressure to assembly 600 the resultant movement at a microscopic level allows the paste to fill in the gaps 1000 visible at 1000 between the paste and the electrode as shown in
[0045] The ability to fill in gaps (small or large) creates a new opportunity to intentionally create contoured and/or roughened substrate surfaces that result in increasing the effective area between the electrode substrate 100, 200 and the paste 415. This not only improves adhesion at the interface between paste and substrate but it provides a greater diversity of ionic and electron flow. This diversity improves performance, e.g., reduced impedance, increased utilization of the paste.
[0046] The previously described processing method only applies to one side of the electrode substrate. In some bipolar applications it may be adequate to just process the PAM 210 paste, for example, with a standalone NAM plate in use. However, it is appreciated that for other applications both sides (the PAM side and the NAM side) of the bipole electrode may be treated.
[0047] In addition, above-described methods are applicable to pasting for monopole electrodes. Currently, monopole electrodes use a grid type electrode substrate 100. In one embodiment the pasted monopole electrodes, produced by a standard monopole pasting machine, is placed into an ultrasonic system with pressure and ultrasonic energy is applied to one or both sides of a monopole electrode substrate depending on the penetration of the ultrasonic energy. In another embodiment the monopole processing is the same as described herein for dual side processing of a bipole electrode, however in this case, both sides are either pasted with NAM 205 or both sides are pasted with PAM 210.
[0048]
[0049]
[0050] Additional embodiments of the invention involve a new method and associated apparatuses that use multiple layers of paste rather than a single layer of paste. The above described embodiments enable these additional embodiments because the above described embodiments do not mix the layers of paste, since the joining of the layers of paste is accomplished by application of pressure perpendicular to the plane of the electrode substrate together with the application of ultrasonic energy.
[0051] The use of only a single layer of paste is well known in the art. Paste is formulated to best address the needs of the application. However, those needs may be conflicting from the perspective of paste formulation, e.g., for example, a paste that has good adhesion may not have good energy capacity, or durability. Therefore, prior art paste formulation is a compromise. The below described embodiments can use multiple layers of paste to optimize the performance of a battery for the specific application without compromising performance.
[0052] One of the below described embodiments relates to layered PAM paste 210 formulations, while another relates to layered NAM paste 205 formulations. Both embodiments relate to the above-described embodiments and the processing steps/equipment discussed in
[0053] According to the following embodiments, improved battery performance is achieved by layering pastes made possible because of physical locations of failure mechanisms. For example, a corrosion layer forms between the electrode substrate and the paste. The inability of forming a good corrosion layer is a common failure mechanism in bipolar lead acid batteries. It is therefore advantageous to use a first layer of paste (layer in contact with the electrode substrate) that provides good adhesion to the electrode substrate. As another example, shedding or flaking of paste is known to lead to soft shorts within a battery cell, i.e., such shedding or flacking creates a current leakage path. It is therefore advantageous to use a second layer of paste that provides good cohesion properties on top of the first layer of paste.
[0054] According to one embodiment related to layered PAM formulations, the composition and structure of layered PAM pastes is improved. Traditionally PAM paste contains lead sulfate which is either tetra-basic or tri-basic. Tetra-basic paste, a SEM photo of which is provided at 1400 in
[0055] According to one embodiment related to layered NAM formulations, NAM does not have the corrosion layer problem that PAM does. However, charge acceptance can be improved by a layered approach to the NAM paste. The first layer of paste, in contact with the electrode substrate, is designed to have a high discharge capacity, whereas the second layer is designed to have high charge acceptance.
[0056] These embodiments modify the process flow described earlier in
[0057] Station 1A: A paster (a means of producing paste, either manually or automated) produces an amount of wet paste at step 1805A for a first a layer of paste. The first layer of paste may be sectioned or segmented into desired dimensions.
[0058] Station 1B: A paster (a means of producing paste, either manually or automated) produces an amount of wet paste at step 1805B for a second layer of paste. The second paste may be sectioned or segmented into desired dimensions.
[0059] Station 2: One or more sections or segments of multiple layers of paste are applied, sequentially, at step 1810 into a first carrier structure, much like the carrier 400 described above. In different embodiments carrier 400 may provide different functions. One component and function of carrier 400 is a vertical portion 400A which allows for the lateral movement of layers of paste that may result from the combination of pressure and ultrasound energy. Vertical portion 400A limits the amount of lateral movement so it cannot exceed the dimensions of the cavity 420 defined by inside vertical surface of vertical portion 400A. Note that the vertical dimension y1 of vertical portion 400A is less than the vertical dimension y2 of the layers of paste. This allows force to be applied, for example, by an ultrasonic system, to multiple layers of paste and limits the amount of vertical displacement of the layers of paste. Another component and function of carrier 400 is a horizontal portion 400B that provides protection of the surface of the first layer of paste that is adjacent the horizontal portion 400B. Portion 400B comprises a material that does not adhere to the first layer of paste.
[0060] Station 3: An electrode substrate, e.g., electrode 100 or 200, to which the layers of paste are to be sequentially applied, is first inspected and any debris or defects corrected at step 1815.
[0061] Station 4: With reference to
[0062] Station 5: Carrier 400 and Carrier 500 are positioned at step 1825 so the layers of paste are brought into contact with the surface of electrode substrate 100, 200 to make assembly 1700 depicted in
[0063] Station 6: an ultrasonic system 700, such as shown in
[0064] Station 7: after assembly 1700 has been processed at station 6, it is moved to station 7 to prepare for curing. The operations performed at step 1835 depend on the type of carrier 400 used.
[0065] Stations 8 and 9: the modified assembly 905, with two layers according to this embodiment, is placed in an oven to be cured at step 1840, after which it can be stored at step 1845.
[0066] Another embodiment introduces the second layer of paste after the first layer has received one application of ultrasound. The second layer is then added to the first layer and a second application of ultrasound in completed.
[0067] Yet another embodiment applies ultrasound to the layered pastes before they are integrated with carrier 500. The intention with this embodiment is to secure the layers to themselves and then secure the composited layers to the electrode with a second ultrasound application.