Battery system
11600893 · 2023-03-07
Assignee
Inventors
- Byoung Kyu Park (Daejeon, KR)
- Seok Min Kim (Daejeon, KR)
- Seon Yong Kim (Daejeon, KR)
- Ha Chul JEONG (Daejeon, KR)
Cpc classification
H01M2010/4271
ELECTRICITY
H01M10/425
ELECTRICITY
G01R31/396
PHYSICS
B60L3/0046
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B60L58/22
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Y02T10/70
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
H02J7/0013
ELECTRICITY
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
H01M10/4207
ELECTRICITY
H01M10/482
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H01M10/42
ELECTRICITY
H02J7/00
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A battery system according to the present invention includes: a plurality of battery cells electrically connected to each other; cell voltage sensing lines connected to ends of the battery cells, respectively; a battery management system sensing voltages of the battery cells through the respective cell voltage sensing lines; fuses connected to the cell voltage sensing lines, respectively, to cut off a flow of an excessive current exceeding a rated current when the excessive current flows through the cell voltage sensing lines; and emergency preventing switches connected to the cell voltage sensing lines, respectively, so as to be turned on at the time of sensing the voltage of the battery cell, and turned off in a case when a short circuit between the cell voltage sensing lines occurs.
Claims
1. A battery system comprising: a plurality of battery cells electrically connected to each other; cell voltage sensing lines connected to ends of the battery cells, respectively; a battery management system sensing voltages of the battery cells through the respective cell voltage sensing lines; fuses connected to the cell voltage sensing lines, respectively, to cut off a flow of an excessive current exceeding a rated current when the excessive current flows through the cell voltage sensing lines due to a short circuit between the cell voltage sensing lines; and emergency preventing switches connected to the cell voltage sensing lines, respectively, so as to be turned on at the time of sensing the voltage of the battery cell, and turned off in a case when the short circuit between the cell voltage sensing lines occurs, wherein the emergency preventing switch is connected between the fuse and the battery management system to be turned off when any fuse provided in the corresponding line is first disconnected when a short circuit occurs between the cell voltage sensing lines.
2. The battery system of claim 1, wherein the emergency preventing switch is connected to the fuse in series.
3. The battery system of claim 1, wherein a gate of the emergency preventing switch connected to one cell voltage sensing line is connected to another cell voltage sensing line having a lower potential than that of the one cell voltage sensing line, such that the emergency preventing switch is turned on when a low voltage is applied to the gate of the emergency preventing switch, and the emergency preventing switch is turned off when a high voltage is applied to the gate of the emergency preventing switch.
4. The battery system of claim 3, wherein in a case when the short circuit between the cell voltage sensing lines occurs, if the fuse connected to one cell voltage sensing line having a lower potential among the cell voltage sensing lines short-circuited to each other is blown first, a high voltage is sequentially applied to gates of the emergency preventing switches connected to other cell voltage sensing lines each having a higher potential than that of the one cell voltage sensing line having the lower potential, such that the emergency preventing switches connected to the other cell voltage sensing lines each having the higher potential, respectively, are sequentially turned off.
5. The battery system of claim 1, wherein a fusing time of the fuse connected to one cell voltage sensing line is equal to or longer than a fusing time of the fuse connected to another cell voltage sensing line having a lower potential than that of the one cell voltage sensing line.
6. The battery system of claim 5, wherein a fusing time of the fuse connected to the cell voltage sensing line having the highest potential among the cell voltage sensing lines is longer than a fusing time of the fuse connected to the cell voltage sensing line having the lowest potential.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
(3)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF MAIN ELEMENTS
(4) 1, 1000: Battery system 10, 100: Battery cell 20, 200: Cell voltage sensing line 30, 300: Battery management system 40, 400: Fuse 500: Emergency preventing switch
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS
(5) Hereinafter, the present invention will be described in detail with reference to the accompanying drawings. A detailed description for the well-known functions and configurations that may unnecessarily make the gist of the present invention unclear will be omitted.
(6)
(7) The number of battery cells 100 is plural and the battery cells 100 are electrically connected to each other. The cell voltage sensing lines 200 are connected to ends of the battery cells 100, respectively. Although
(8) One end of the cell voltage sensing line 200 is connected to a cathode or an anode of the battery 100, and the other end of the cell voltage sensing line 200 is connected to the battery management system 300. Each of the cell voltage sensing lines 200 has its own potential, and in the following description, it is assumed that a potential of the cell voltage sensing line increases from a cell voltage sensing line cs1 to a cell voltage sensing line cs8. POW The battery management system 300 may sense voltages of the battery cells 100 through the cell voltage sensing lines 200, and perform voltage balancing of the battery cells 100 by using the sensed voltage of the battery cell 100. As described with reference to
(9) The fuse 400 is connected to the cell voltage sensing line 200, and functions to cut off a flow of an excessive current exceeding a rated current when the excessive current flows through the cell voltage sensing line 200.
(10) The emergency preventing switch 500 is also connected to the cell voltage sensing line 200, and connected to the fuse 400 in series. Further, it is preferable that the emergency preventing switch 500 is connected between the fuse 400 and the battery management system 300.
(11) The emergency preventing switch 500 may include a FET and a clamping diode connected to the FET like the balancing switch, and according to an exemplary embodiment, the emergency preventing switch 500 may be a p-channel FET.
(12) A cathode of the clamping diode constituting the emergency preventing switch 500 is connected to the cathode of the battery cell 100 through the fuse 400, and an anode of the clamping diode is connected to the battery management system 300.
(13) Further, a gate of the FET constituting the emergency preventing switch 500 is connected to an adjacent cell voltage sensing line having a low potential. Specifically, a gate of a FET constituting an emergency preventing switch T2 connected to the cell voltage sensing line cs2 is connected to the cell voltage sensing line cs1 having a lower potential than that of the cell voltage sensing line cs2. Further, a gate of a FET constituting an emergency preventing switch T3 connected to the cell voltage sensing line cs3 is connected to the cell voltage sensing line cs2 having a lower potential than that of the cell voltage sensing line cs3. In this manner, each of gates of FETs constituting emergency preventing switches T4, T5, T6, T7, and T8, respectively, is connected to an adjacent cell voltage sensing line cs3, cs4, cs5, cs6, or cs7 having a low potential. As a result, a low voltage is applied to the gate of the FET and the emergency preventing switch 500 is turned on at the time of a normal operation in which a short circuit between the cell voltage sensing lines 200 does not occur.
(14) Once the emergency preventing switch 500 is turned on, the battery management system 300 may sense the voltage of the battery cell 100 through the cell voltage sensing line 200, and detect occurrence of voltage unbalance between the battery cells 100 by using the sensed voltage of the battery cell 100. In this case, the battery management system 300 performs the voltage balancing of the battery cell 100 by using a balancing resistor Rb and a balancing switch SWb.
(15) Meanwhile, if the cell voltage sensing line cs2 having a relatively lower potential and the cell voltage sensing line cs7 having relatively higher potential are short-circuited to each other as illustrated in
(16) If the Fuse F7 connect d to the cell voltage sensing line cs7 having the relatively higher potential, rather than the fuse connected to the cell voltage sensing line cs2 having the relatively lower potential, is blown first, a voltage at a point C becomes V1, Vin7 is as represented by the following Expression 5, and Vin6 is as represented by the following Expression 6.
Vin7=V7+V6+V5+V4+V3+V2 [Expression 5]
Vin6=−(V5+V4+V3+V2) [Expression 6]
(17) As can be appreciated from Expressions 5 and 6, Vin7 is V7 before the fuse F7 is blown, and becomes a voltage higher than V7, which is an excessive voltage, once the fuse F7 is blown, and Vin6 is V6 before the fuse F7 is blown, and becomes a (−) voltage, which is a reverse voltage, once the fuse F7 is blown.
(18) In contrast, if the fuse F2 connected to the cell voltage sensing line cs2 having the relatively lower potential, rather than the fuse F7 connected to the cell voltage sensing line cs7 having the relatively higher potential, is blown first, voltage at a point D becomes V6+V5++V4+V3+V2+V1.
(19) As described above, the gates of the FETs respectively constituting the emergency preventing switches T2, T3, T4, T5, T6, T7, and T8 are respectively connected to the cell voltage sensing lines cs1, cs2, cs3, cs4, cs5, cs6, and cs7 each having a lower potential than that of each of the cell voltage sensing line cs2, cs3, cs4, cs5, cs6, cs7, and cs8 to which the emergency preventing switches T2, T3, T4, T5, T6, T7, and T8 are connected, respectively.
(20) Therefore, in a case when the cell voltage sensing line cs2 and the cell voltage sensing line cs7 are short-circuited to each other, and the fuse F2 connected to the cell voltage sensing line cs2 having the relatively lower potential is blown first, a high voltage is sequentially applied to the gates of the emergency preventing switches T3, T4, T5, T6, T7, and T8 respectively connected to the cell voltage sensing lines cs3, cs4, cs5, cs6, cs7, and cs8 each having a higher potential than that of the cell voltage sensing line cs2, such that the emergency preventing switches T3, T4, T5, T6, T7, and T8 are sequentially turned off. Further, once the emergency preventing switches T3, T4, T5, T6, T7, and T8 are sequentially turned off, a current does not flow through the cell voltage sensing lines cs3, cs4, cs5, cs6, cs7, and cs8, such that a reverse voltage is not applied between the cell voltage sensing lines.
(21) If the fuse F2 connected to the cell voltage sensing line cs2 having the relatively lower potential, rather than the fuse F7 connected to the cell voltage sensing line cs7 having the relatively higher potential, is blown first, Vin1 is as represented by the following Expression 7, and Vin2 as required by the following Expression 8.
Vin1=V6+V5+V4+V3+V2+V1 [Expression 7]
Vin2=0 [Expression 8]
(22) As can be appreciated from Expressions 7 and 8, Vin1 is V1 before the fuse F2 is blown, and becomes a voltage higher than V1, which is an excessive voltage, once the fuse F2 is blown, and Vin2 is V2 before the fuse F2 is blown, and becomes 0 V once the fuse F2 is blown.
(23) That is, it may be appreciated that in a case when the cell voltage sensing line cs2 having the relatively lower potential and the cell voltage sensing line cs7 having the relatively higher potential are short-circuited to each other, if the fuse F2 connected to the cell voltage sensing line cs2 having the relatively lower potential, rather than the fuse F7 connected to the cell voltage sensing line cs7 having the relatively higher potential, is blown first, a reverse voltage is not applied between the cell voltage sensing lines cs2 and cs3.
(24) In order to prevent a reverse voltage from being applied between cell voltage sensing lines by making a fuse connected to a cell voltage sensing line having a relatively lower potential, rather than a fuse connected to a cell voltage sensing line having a relatively higher potential, be blown first, a fusing time of the fuse connected to the cell voltage sensing line having the relatively higher potential needs to be longer than a fusing time of the fuse connected to the cell voltage sensing line having the relatively lower potential. Here, a fusing time of a fuse means a time taken for the fuse to blow in a case when an excessive current exceeding the rated current flows through the fuse.
(25) However, in a case when a current flowing due to the reverse voltage applied between the cell voltage sensing lines is lower than a rated current allowed for the balancing resistor Rb in the battery management system 300, emergencies such as ignition do not occur in the balancing resistor Rb regardless of whether the fuse connected to the cell voltage sensing line having the relatively lower potential is blown first or the fuse connected to the cell voltage sensing line having the relatively higher potential is blown first. Therefore, in this case, the fusing time of the fuse connected to the cell voltage sensing line having the relatively higher potential may be set to be the same as the fusing time of the fuse connected to the cell voltage sensing line having the relatively lower potential.
(26) In consideration of this fact, the fusing time of the fuse may be set as represented by the following Expression in order to prevent the reverse voltage from being applied between the cell voltage sensing lines.
Tm8≥Tm7≥Tm6≥Tm5≥Tm4≥Tm3≥Tm2≥Tm1 [Expression 9]
(27) Here, Tm1 is a fusing time of a fuse F1, Tm2 is a fusing time of the fuse F2, Tm3 is a fusing time of a fuse F3, Tm4 is a fusing time of a fuse F4, Tm5 is a fusing time of a fuse F5, Tm6 is a fusing time of a fuse F6, Tm7 is a fusing time of the fuse F7, and Tm8 is a fusing time of a fuse F8.
(28) However, in a case when the fusing times of the fuses are the same as one another in Expression 9, it becomes not important whether fuse connected to cell voltage sensing line having the relatively lower potential is blown first or the fuse connected to the cell voltage sensing line having the relatively higher potential is blown first. Therefore, the fusing time of the fuse F8 connected to the cell voltage sensing line cs8 having the highest potential among the cell voltage sensing lines cs1, cs2, cs3, cs4, cs5, cs6, cs7, and cs8 needs to be longer than the fusing time of the fuse F1 connected to the cell voltage sensing line cs1 having the lowest potential, which is represented by the following Expression 10.
Tm8>Tm1 [Expression 10]
(29) As described above, according to the present invention, in a case when a short circuit occurs between the cell voltage sensing lines, the emergency preventing switch connected to the cell voltage sensing line is turned off, such that a current caused by a reverse voltage does not flow through the balancing resistor in the battery management system. As a result, it is possible to prevent emergencies such as heat generation, smoke generation, or ignition in the battery management system.
(30) Although the present invention has been described with reference to the exemplary embodiments and the accompanying drawings, it is not limited to the above-mentioned exemplary embodiments but may be variously modified and changed from the above description by those skilled in the art to which the present invention pertains. Therefore, the technical idea of the present invention should be understood only the following claims, and all of the equivalences and equivalent modifications to the claims are intended to fall within the scope of the technical idea of the present invention.