With prismatic LFP battery packs, consistency is key to ensure reliability, but especially to ensure performance and longevity. Readily used in electric vehicles (EV), energy storage system (ESS) and solar/application storage – the consistency of a prismatic LFP battery pack gives YOU a cloak of safety. It also helps to make the whole sometimes-complex charging/discharging cycle to be safer, and optimise performance. Here are some of the major steps to ensuring consistency at the assembly stage of a prismatic LFP battery pack.
1. Effective sorting of the battery cell.
Of the many steps, one of key important elements to ensuring performance and thus consistency of a prismatic LFP battery pack is the sorting of the individual cells. Battery cells can of course be reported as having subtle differences in capacity, voltage and even internal resistance, even though they emanate from a same batch and even same grid machine manufacturer. This would cause imbalanced packs and this in turn would carry on the imbalance, and thus the consequent “distraction” to the lifespan of the battery pack and/or its good implementation.
Using a sorter so you can sort the cells as you would like, efficiently, is now a convenient step in the whole process.
So now you can with a battery sorting machine, easily and quickly clash and group cells of similar specifications so that you…put ONLY similarly characterised cells into any one pack. And to maintain the balance during the charging and the discharging of the prismatic LFP battery packs all through their lives. Once the cells are brought up to test they are grouped in accordance with the performance metric. So for instance, similar voltage range cells, and similar capacity will be put into the same pack together.The advantage of using battery grading sorting machines like this is that only the cells that are acceptable plus or minus the necessary specifications of the battery go into a pack. By grading and sorting the cells like this, those that are mismatched or underweight are discarded, either of which increases the chance of the final battery pack being inconsistent.
3. Temperature Control During Assembly
The temperature where the actual assembly takes place (the putting together of the fifty niche LFP battery packs) is also important; should the temperature vary suddenly the cells themselves could be affected; thus by assembling the battery pack in a temperature controlled environment we are sure that the cells are not being ‘burnt’ or made too cold.
We need here to ‘automate’ the sorting function (those battery sorting machines again) and even add in some elements to keep the temperature control right so that the whole process is ‘colder’ or ‘warmer’ as may be necessary to protect against the risk of ‘burning’ the cells, a major pack consideration.Automated Testing and Monitoring
To monitor that the make-up of the prismatic LFP battery packs does in fact meet Up to this point, this testing involves putting the voltage, current, capacity and so on. Sometimes used to check the cells and the sorting machines, the equipment provides the tester with an instant printout of every cell’s condition. If any population of cells don’t pass spectrum, retraining re-tests the rest to pinpointthe problem. There are also IR testers that test the battery heat and give the manufacturer an idea of its health.
IR testers also make it easy to monitor battery health, even while being assembled, so in the case of a pack there are no weak or faulty cells being placed into position. With an automated system, there is going to be much less variance in the pack across conditions.
Packaging Cells
How prismatic LFP cells are packaged is also a factor having a significant bearing on consistency for the pack. Consistent care with regard to packaging; cells would be required both when they were serviced for transport and also when being put together.Lithium battery cell sorting cabinets and sorting feeders also taking the cells in feeding the pack must have an easy setup that eliminates stress on the cells from excessive force and proper place to wards onsumeanuns.
6) Monitoring State of Charge (SOC) and State of Health (SOH)
Tracking the State of Charge (SOC) and State of Health (SOH) of each prismatic cell when ASSEMBLED IS ANOTHER KEY PART OF consistency. SOC is just that, how full the battery is when you put it together; SOH indicates the battery’s ability to “hold a charge” without recharging. These two factors should ideally be balanced before the battery pack leaves your factory.
The use of semi-automatic cell sorting machines that incorporate SOC with SOH monitoring can assist with achieving consistency. Bringing real-time status data on each from themselves, you should be able to balance the pack fairly tightly by only picking cells that are within similar metrics of degree of charge as well as similar temperature and performance range of battery to ensure that no poor performing cell will “drag down the pack” as it were.
7) Final Quality Control and Testing
The last but certainly no less important step is QC, performed before the prismatic pack leaves the factory assembly floor. In this part of the workflow, you are going to test each and every pack you have assembled and make sure that it meets the prescribed exigencies of performance, safety, and so forth. Consider this an umbrella quality inspection, encompassing all the tests relating to electrical requirements, from temperature ranges in SS autos to mechanical integrity, and shipping etc., to the appearance of the pack itself.
8) Conclusion, final QC of each prismatic LFP battery pack will guarantee that it is going to operate exactly as you or they expected (either literally or figuratively) when it is put in service. Fluorescence activated cell sorting and other new (to the reader) quality tests for prismatic LFP in mass production also show up defects that might otherwise not be obvious.
