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Effects of mechanical deformation on electric performance of rechargeable batteries embedded in load carrying composite structures

journal contribution
posted on 2014-01-01, 00:00 authored by S Shalouf, Jin Zhang, C Wang
Integrating rechargeable battery cells with fibre reinforced polymer matrix composites is a promising technology to enable composite structures to concurrently carry load and store electric energy, thus significantly reducing weight at the system level. To develop a design criterion for structural battery composites, rechargeable lithium polymer battery cells were embedded into carbon fibre/epoxy matrix composite laminates, which were then subjected to tensile, flexural and compressive loading. The electric charging/discharging properties were measured at varying levels of applied loads. The results showed that degradation in battery performance, such as voltagea and energy storage capacity, correlated well with the applied strain under three different loading conditions. Under compressive loading, battery cells, due to their multilayer construction, were unable to prevent buckling of composite face sheets due to the low lateral stiffness, leading to lower compressive strength that sandwich panels with foam core.

History

Journal

Plastics, rubber and composites

Volume

43

Issue

3

Pagination

98 - 104

Publisher

Maney Publishing

Location

Leeds, England

ISSN

1465-8011

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal; C Journal article

Copyright notice

2013, Maney Publishing