Abstract Battery aging in research publications and manufacturer specification sheets for individual cells is commonly reported as capacity (Ah) versus cycle number. However, the key measured quantity in battery-powered devices is energy (Wh), which is derived from integrating capacity with voltage. In this work, we compare the rate of capacity and energy loss across a wide range of Li-ion single cell cycling studies with different positive electrode chemistries, charge-discharge rates, and temperatures. We find that the relative rate of discharge energy loss varies with cycling conditions. For many cells cycled under moderate conditions, the rate of discharge energy fade is only slightly faster than the rate of discharge capacity fade. However, some cells demonstrated up to a 15% decline in cycle count when 80% energy retention rather than 80% capacity retention was used as the end-of-life metric. These results highlight the importance of reporting cell aging based on energy fade to avoid overestimating battery lifetime in full systems.
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Yuliya Preger
Reed Wittman
Steve J. Harris
Journal of Electrochemical Energy Conversion and Storage
Sandia National Laboratories California
Cyclotron (Netherlands)
East–West Center
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Preger et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69a286600a974eb0d3c01544 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1115/1.4071224