Jump to content

Nickel–metal hydride battery

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 86.153.131.220 (talk) at 18:22, 25 November 2015 (Undid revision 692319061 by 174.23.128.171 (talk)Nowt to do wit' pronounciation. The 'N' is a consonant so 'A' is correct.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Nickel–metal hydride battery
Modern NiMH rechargeable cells
Energy density140–300 Wh/L
Specific power250–1,000 W/kg
Charge/discharge efficiency66%[1]
Self-discharge rate13.9–70.6% at room temperature
36.4–97.8% at 45 °C
Low self-discharge: 1.3–2.9% at 20 °C
(per month)
Cycle durability500–2000[2] cycles
Nominal cell voltage1.2 V

A nickel–metal hydride battery, abbreviated NiMH or Ni–MH, is a type of rechargeable battery. The chemical reaction at the positive electrode is similar to that of the nickel–cadmium cell (NiCd), with both using nickel oxyhydroxide (NiOOH). However, the negative electrodes use a hydrogen-absorbing alloy instead of cadmium. A NiMH battery can have two to three times the capacity of an equivalent size NiCd, and its energy density can approach that of a lithium-ion battery.

History

Disassembled NiMH AA battery:
  1. Positive terminal
  2. Outer metal casing (also negative terminal)
  3. Positive electrode
  4. Negative electrode with current collector (metal grid, connected to metal casing)
  5. Separator (between electrodes)

Work on NiMH batteries began at the Battelle-Geneva Research Center following the technology's invention in 1967. It was based on sintered Ti2Ni+TiNi+x alloys and NiOOH-electrodes.[clarification needed] Development was sponsored over nearly two decades by Daimler-Benz and by Volkswagen AG within Deutsche Automobilgesellschaft, now a subsidiary of Daimler AG. The batteries' specific energy reached 50 W·h/kg (180 kJ/kg), power density up to 1000 W/kg and a life of 500 charge cycles (at 100% depth of discharge). Patent applications were filed in European countries (priority: Switzerland), the United States, and Japan. The patents transferred to Daimler-Benz.[3]

Interest grew in the 1970s with the commercialisation of the nickel–hydrogen battery for satellite applications. Hydride technology promised an alternative, less bulky way to store the hydrogen. Research carried out by Philips Laboratories and France's CNRS developed new high-energy hybrid alloys incorporating rare earth metals for the negative electrode. However, these suffered from alloy instability in alkaline electrolyte and consequently insufficient cycle life. In 1987, Willems and Buschow demonstrated a successful battery based on this approach (using a mixture of La0.8Nd0.2Ni2.5Co2.4Si0.1) which kept 84% of its charge capacity after 4000 charge–discharge cycles. More economically viable alloys using mischmetal instead of lanthanum were soon developed. Modern NiMH cells were based on this design.[4] The first consumer grade NiMH cells became commercially available in 1989.[5]

In 1998, Ovonic Battery Co. improved the Ti–Ni alloy structure and composition and patented its innovations.[6]

In 2008, more than two million hybrid cars worldwide were manufactured with NiMH batteries.[7]

In the European Union and due to its Battery Directive, nickel–metal hydride batteries replaced Ni–Cd batteries for portable consumer use.[8]

About 22% of portable rechargeable batteries sold in Japan in 2010 were NiMH.[9] In Switzerland in 2009, the equivalent statistic was approximately 60%.[10] This percentage has fallen over time due to the increase in manufacture of lithium-ion batteries: in 2000, almost half of all portable rechargeable batteries sold in Japan were NiMH.[9]

In 2015 BASF produced a modified microstructure that helped make NiMH batteries more durable, in turn allowing changes to the cell design that saved considerable weight, allowing the gravimetric energy density to reach 140 watt-hours per kilogram.[11]

Electrochemistry

The negative electrode reaction occurring in a NiMH cell is:

H2O + M + e ⇌ OH + MH

The charge reaction is read left-to-right and the discharge reaction is read right-to-left.

On the positive electrode, nickel oxyhydroxide, NiO(OH), is formed:

Ni(OH)2 + OH ⇌ NiO(OH) + H2O + e

The metal M in the negative electrode of a NiMH cell is an intermetallic compound. Many different compounds have been developed for this application, but those in current use fall into two classes. The most common is AB5, where A is a rare earth mixture of lanthanum, cerium, neodymium, praseodymium and B is nickel, cobalt, manganese, or aluminium. Some cells use higher-capacity negative electrode materials based on AB2 compounds, where A is titanium or vanadium and B is zirconium or nickel, modified with chromium, cobalt, iron, or manganese.[12] Any of these compounds serve the same role, reversibly forming a mixture of metal hydride compounds.

When overcharged at low rates, oxygen produced at the positive electrode passes through the separator and recombines at the surface of the negative. Hydrogen evolution is suppressed and the charging energy is converted to heat. This process allows NiMH cells to remain sealed in normal operation and to be maintenance-free.

NiMH cells have an alkaline electrolyte, usually potassium hydroxide. The positive electrode is nickel hydroxide and the negative electrode is hydrogen ions or protons. The hydrogen ions are stored in a metal hydride structure that is the electrode.[13] For separation hydrophilic polyolefin nonwovens are used.[14]

Charge

Charging voltage is in the range of 1.4–1.6 V/cell. In general, a constant-voltage charging method cannot be used for automatic charging. When fast charging, it is advisable to charge the NiMH cells with a smart battery charger to avoid overcharging, which can damage cells.[15] A NiCd charger is not a substitute for an automatic NiMH charger.[citation needed]

Trickle charging

The simplest of the safe charging methods is with a fixed low current, with or without a timer. Most manufacturers claim that overcharging is safe at very low currents, below 0.1 C (C/10) (where C is the current equivalent to the capacity of the battery divided by one hour).[16] The Panasonic NiMH charging manual warns that overcharging for long enough can damage a battery and suggests limiting the total charging time to 10 to 20 hours.[15]

Duracell further suggests that a trickle charge at C/300 can be used for batteries that must be kept in a fully charged state.[16] Some chargers do this after the charge cycle, to offset natural self-discharge. A similar approach is suggested by Energizer,[13] which indicates that self-catalysis can recombine gas formed at the electrodes for charge rates up to C/10. This leads to cell heating. The company recommends C/30 or C/40 for indefinite applications where long life is important. This is the approach taken in emergency lighting applications where the design remains essentially the same as in older NiCd units, except for an increase in the trickle charging resistor value.[citation needed]

Panasonic's handbook recommends that NiMH batteries on standby be charged by a lower duty cycle approach, where a pulse of a higher current is used whenever the battery's voltage drops below 1.3 V. This can extend battery life and use less energy.[15]

ΔV charging method

NiMH charge curve

In order prevent cell damage, fast chargers must terminate their charge cycle before overcharging occurs. One method is to monitor the change of voltage with time. When the battery is fully charged the voltage across its terminals drops slightly. The charger can detect this and stop charging. This method is often used with nickel–cadmium cells which display a large voltage drop at full charge. However, the voltage drop is much less pronounced for NiMH and can be non-existent at low charge rates, which can make the approach unreliable.[16]

Another option is to monitor the change of voltage with respect to time and stop when this becomes zero, but this risks premature cutoffs.[16] With this method, a much higher charging rate can be used than with a trickle charge, up to 1 C. At this charge rate, Panasonic recommends to terminate charging when the voltage drops 5–10 mV per cell from the peak voltage.[15] Since this method measures the voltage across the battery, a constant current (rather than a constant voltage) charging circuit is used.

ΔT temperature charging method

The temperature change method is similar in principle to the ΔV method. Because the charging voltage is nearly constant, constant-current charging delivers energy at a near-constant rate. When the cell is not fully charged, most of this energy is converted to chemical energy. However, when the cell reaches full charge, most of the charging energy is converted to heat. This increases the rate of change of battery temperature, which can be detected by a sensor such as a thermistor. Both Panasonic and Duracell suggest a maximum rate of temperature increase of 1 °C per minute. Using a temperature sensor allows an absolute temperature cutoff, which Duracell suggests at 60 °C.[16] With both the ΔT and the ΔV charging methods, both manufacturers recommend a further period of trickle charging to follow the initial rapid charge.[citation needed]

Safety

NiMH cell that popped its cap due to failed safety valve

A resettable fuse in series with the cell, particularly of the bimetallic strip type, increases safety. This fuse opens if either the current or the temperature gets too high.[16]

Modern NiMH cells contain catalysts to handle gases produced by over-charging (2 H2 + O2 — catalyst → 2 H2O). However, this only works with overcharging currents of up to 0.1 C (nominal capacity divided by ten hours). This reaction causes batteries to heat, ending the charging process.[16] Some quick chargers have a cooling fan.

A method for very rapid charging called in-cell charge control involves an internal pressure switch in the cell, which disconnects the charging current in the event of overpressure.

One inherent risk with NiMH chemistry is that overcharging causes hydrogen buildup, potentially rupturing the cell. Therefore, cells have a vent to release the gas in the event of serious overcharging.[17]

Nickel metal hydride batteries are made of environmentally friendly materials.[18] The batteries contain only mild toxins and are recyclable.[13]

Loss of capacity

Memory effect from repeated partial discharge can occur, but is reversible through charge cycling.[19]

Discharge

A fully charged cell supplies an average 1.25 V/cell during discharge, declining to about 1.0–1.1 V/cell (further discharge may cause permanent damage in the case of multi-cell packs, due to polarity reversal). Under a light load (0.5 ampere), the starting voltage of a freshly charged AA NiMH cell in good condition is about 1.4 volts.[20]

Over-discharge

Complete discharge can reverse polarity in one or more cells, which can permanently damage them. This situation can occur in the common arrangement of four AA cells in series in a digital camera, where one completely discharges before the others due to small differences in capacity among the cells. When this happens, the good cells start to drive the discharged cell in reverse. Some cameras, GPS receivers and PDAs detect the safe end-of-discharge voltage of the series cells and auto-shutdown, but devices such as flashlights and some toys do not. A single cell driving a load or a cell connected in parallel to other cells cannot suffer from polarity reversal, because no other cells are present.[citation needed]

Irreversible damage from polarity reversal is a particular danger, even when a low voltage threshold cutout is employed, should the cells vary in temperature. This is because capacity significantly declines as the cells are cooled. This results in a lower voltage under load of the colder cells.[21]

Self-discharge

NiMH cells historically had a somewhat higher self-discharge rate (equivalent to internal leakage) than NiCd cells. The self-discharge rate varies greatly with temperature, where lower storage temperature leads to slower discharge rate and longer battery life. The self-discharge is 5–20% on the first day and stabilizes around 0.5–4% per day at room temperature.[22][23][24][25][26] But at 45 °C it is approximately three times as high.[16]

Low self-discharge

The low self-discharge nickel–metal hydride battery (LSD NiMH) has a significantly lower rate of self-discharge. The innovation was introduced in 2005 by Sanyo, under their Eneloop brand.[27] By using an improved electrode separator and improved positive electrode, manufacturers claim the cells retain 70% to 85% of their capacity when stored one year at 20 °C (68 °F), compared to about half for normal NiMH batteries. They are otherwise similar to other NiMH batteries, and can be charged in the typical chargers. These cells are marketed as "hybrid", "ready-to-use" or "pre-charged" rechargeables. Retention of charge depends in large part on the battery's impedance or internal resistance (the lower the better), and on its physical size and charge capacity.

Separators keep the two electrodes apart to slow electrical discharge while allowing the transport of ionic charge carriers that close the circuit during the passage of current.[28] High quality separators are critical for battery performance.

Thick separators are one way to reduce self-discharge, but take up space and reduce capacity; while thin separators tend to raise the self-discharge rate. Some batteries may have overcome this tradeoff using thin separators with more precise manufacturing and by using a more advanced sulfonated polyolefin separator.

Low self-discharge cells have lower capacity than standard NiMH cells because of the separator's larger volume. The highest-capacity low-self-discharge AA cells have 2000–2600 mA·h capacity, and AAA 1000 mA·h, compared to 2800 mA·h and 1300 mA·h for high-capacity AA and AAA NiMH cells.[29]

Compared to other battery types

NiMH cells are often used in digital cameras and other high drain devices, where over the duration of single charge use they outperform primary (such as alkaline) batteries.

NiMH cells are advantageous for high current drain applications, largely due to their lower internal resistance. Typical alkaline AA size batteries, which offer approximately 2600 mA·h capacity at low current demand (25 mA), provide only 1300 mA·h capacity with a 500 mA load.[30] Digital cameras with LCDs and flashlights can draw over 1000 mA, quickly depleting them. NiMH cells can deliver these current levels without similar loss of capacity.[13]

Certain devices that were designed to operate using primary alkaline chemistry (or zinc–carbon/chloride) cells will not function with NiMH cells. However most devices compensate for the voltage drop of an alkaline battery as it discharges down to about one volt. Low internal resistance allows NiMH cells to deliver a near-constant voltage until they are almost completely discharged. Battery level indicators overstate the remaining charge if it was designed to read alkaline cells. The voltage of alkaline cells decreases steadily during most of the discharge cycle.

Lithium-ion batteries have a higher specific energy than nickel–metal hydride batteries,[31] but they are significantly more expensive.[32]

As of 2005 nickel metal hydride batteries constituted three percent of the battery market.[18]

Applications

High power Ni–MH battery of Toyota NHW20 Prius, Japan
Nickel–metal hydride 24V battery pack made by VARTA, Museum Autovision, Altlussheim, Germany

Consumer electronics

NiMH batteries have replaced NiCd for many roles, notably small rechargeable batteries. NiMH batteries are commonly available in AA (penlight-size) batteries. These have nominal charge capacities (C) of 1.1–2.8 Ah at 1.2 V, measured at the rate that discharges the cell in five hours. Useful discharge capacity is a decreasing function of the discharge rate, but up to a rate of around 1×C (full discharge in one hour), it does not differ significantly from the nominal capacity.[33] NiMH batteries nominally operate at 1.2 V per cell, somewhat lower than conventional 1.5 V cells, but will operate many devices designed for that voltage.

Electric vehicles

Applications of NiMH electric vehicle batteries include all-electric plug-in vehicles such as the General Motors EV1, Honda EV Plus, Ford Ranger EV and Vectrix scooter. Hybrid vehicles such as the Toyota Prius, Honda Insight, Ford Escape Hybrid, Chevrolet Malibu Hybrid and Honda Civic Hybrid also use them.

Stanford R. Ovshinsky invented and patented a popular improvement of the NiMH battery and founded Ovonic Battery Company in 1982. General Motors purchased Ovonics' patent in 1994. By the late 1990s, NiMH batteries were being used successfully in many fully electric vehicles, such as the General Motors EV1 and Dodge Caravan EPIC minivan. In October 2000, the patent was sold to Texaco, and a week later Texaco was acquired by Chevron. Chevron's Cobasys subsidiary provides these batteries only to large OEM orders. General Motors shut down production of the EV1 citing lack of battery availability as a chief obstacle. Cobasys control of NiMH batteries created a patent encumbrance for large automotive NiMH batteries.[34][35][36][37][38]

See also

References

  1. ^ "NiMH Battery Charging Basics". PowerStream.com.
  2. ^ "Product Lineup". Panasonic.net.
  3. ^ The US patent is US patent 3824131A, Dr. Klaus Beccu, "Negative electrode of titanium–nickel alloy hydride phases", assigned to Battelle-Geneva R&D Center . For the performance data, see the "Examples" section.
  4. ^ Nii, K.; Amano, M. (1997). "R & D of Hydrogen Absorbing Alloys in Japan". Acta Metallurgica Sinica. 10 (3): 249–255. Retrieved 10 September 2011.
  5. ^ In search of the perfect battery, The Economist, 6 March 2008
  6. ^ US patent 6413670, "High power nickel–metal hydride batteries and high power alloys/electrodes for use therein", published July 2, 2002 
  7. ^ Avicenne Conf., Nice 2008, M.A. Fetcenko/ECD
  8. ^ "Directive 2006/66/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of the 6 September 2006 on batteries and accumulators and repealing Directive 91/157/EEC" (PDF). Official Journal of the European Union (L 266). European Union. 2006-09-26. Retrieved 2015-11-13.
  9. ^ a b "Secondary battery sales statistics by volume". Battery Association of Japan. Retrieved 10 September 2011.
  10. ^ "Batterien-Absatzstatistik 2008" (PDF) (in German). INOBAT (the Swiss interest organisation for battery disposal). p. 2. Archived from the original (PDF) on November 14, 2011. Retrieved 10 September 2011. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |trans_title= ignored (|trans-title= suggested) (help)
  11. ^ Bullis, Kevin (February 19, 2015). "Old Battery Type Gets an Energy Boost". Technology Review. Retrieved February 2015. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |access-date= (help)
  12. ^ Kopera, J. (25 June 2004). "Inside the Nickel Metal Hydride Battery" (PDF). Cobasys. Retrieved 2011-09-10.
  13. ^ a b c d Nickel Metal Hydride Handbook (PDF) (NiMH02.01 ed.). Energizer Battery Manufacturing.
  14. ^ "Japanese Nonwoven Battery Applications". thefreelibrary.com.
  15. ^ a b c d "Charge Methods for Nickel Metal Hydride Batteries" (PDF). Nickel Metal Hydride Handbook. Panasonic.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g h Charge Sealed Nickel–Metal Hydride Batteries. Duracell. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  17. ^ Mukund R. Patel (2005), "Spacecraft Power Systems" CRC Press ISBN 978-0-8493-2786-5 p. 209
  18. ^ a b Pistoia, Gianfranco (2005). Batteries for Portable Devices. Boston: Amsterdam. ISBN 0080455565.
  19. ^ "Voltage Depression ("Memory Effect")". Duracell.com. Procter & Gamble. Archived from the original on March 3, 2009. Retrieved September 15, 2015.
  20. ^ Energizer NH15-2300mAh datasheet
  21. ^ Sandeep Dhameja (2002), Electric Vehicle Battery Systems, Newnes, ISBN 0-7506-9916-7, pp. 118, 123
  22. ^ "Nickel–Metal Hydride (NiMH) Battery Charger and Battery Pack. User's Manual" (PDF). Sea-Bird Electronics, Inc. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2009-02-27. Retrieved 2009-07-10. NiMH batteries self-discharge up to 20% in the first 24 hours after charging, then as much as 15% per month. Self-discharge is highly temperature dependent. NiMH batteries self discharge about three times faster at 40 °C than at 20 °C. Age also affects self-discharge. Older battery packs self-discharge faster than new ones.
  23. ^ "epanorama.net: Battery Power Supply Page". Retrieved 2009-07-10. A NiMH battery can lose up to 2% of its charge per day sitting on the shelf.
  24. ^ "Battery Nurse: VCS, Voltage Control System". Retrieved 2009-07-10. NiMh batteries tend to self-discharge at 3–4% of capacity per day.
  25. ^ "Choosing the Right Battery Pack". Archived from the original on 2008-07-04. Retrieved 2009-07-10. Nickel Metal Hydride (NiMh) Approx 1% per day if unused.
  26. ^ "GP Batteries (Hong Kong) FAQ". Archived from the original on 2007-12-11. Retrieved 2009-07-10. 18. What is the self-discharge rate of NiMH batteries? In general, the rate of self-discharge ranges from 15% to 20% per month at room temperature.
  27. ^ "General Description". Eneloop.info. Sanyo. Archived from the original on 2012-09-02. Retrieved 2015-08-06.
  28. ^ Flaim, Tony, Yubao Wang, and Ramil Mercado. "High Refractive Index Polymer Coatings." SPIE Proceedings of Optical Systems Design. Web
  29. ^ us.sanyo.com: Product information for Sanyo Eneloop XX
  30. ^ "Energizer E91" (PDF). Data.Energizer.com. Energizer. p. 1. Retrieved 2015-11-05.
  31. ^ "Mitsubishi Heavy to make lithium ion car batteries". Yahoo finance, Singapore, quoting Reuters. 23 January 2007. Archived from the original on January 11, 2008. Retrieved July 2007. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  32. ^ Fetcenko, Michael (2009-10-01). Ovonic NiMH – Strong Now, Room for Growth (PDF). The 11thInternational Power Supply Conference and Exhibition – Avicenne 2009. Ovonic Battery Company. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-02-16. Retrieved 2015-06-25.
  33. ^ "Ni–MH Batteries Technical Bulletin". Duracell. Archived from the original on April 25, 2012. Retrieved 4 November 2011. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  34. ^ Jeff Cobb. "New Hybrid Reviews, News & Hybrid Mileage (MPG) Info - Hybrid Cars". HybridCars.com.
  35. ^ Sherry Boschert (2006). Plug-in Hybrids: The Cars that will Recharge America. New Society Publishers, Gabriola Island, Canada. ISBN 978-0-86571-571-4.
  36. ^ Shnayerson, Michael (1996-08-27). The Car That Could: The Inside Story of GM’s Revolutionary Electric Vehicle. Random House. pp. 194–207, 263–264. ISBN 978-0-679-42105-4.
  37. ^ Coker, M. (2003-05-15). "Dude, Wheres My Electric Car!?!". OCWeekly.com. Retrieved 2009-10-08.
  38. ^ Greenberg J. (2008-10-14). "The Edison of our Age: Stan Ovshinsky and the Future of Energy (Video Interview Part 1)". The Energy Roadmap. Retrieved 2009-10-08.