This Brief reviews contemporary research conducted in university and industry laboratories on thermal management in electrochemical energy storage systems (capacitors and batteries) that have been widely used as power sources in many practical applications, such as automobiles, hybrid transport, renewable energy installations, power backup and electronic devices. Placing a particular emphasis on supercapacitors, the authors discuss how supercapacitors, or ultra capacitors, are complementing and replacing, batteries because of their faster power delivery, longer life cycle and higher coulombic efficiency, while providing higher energy density than conventional electrolytic capacitors. Recent advances in both macro- and micro capacitor technologies are covered. The work facilitates systematic understanding of thermal transport in such devices that can help develop better power management systems.
Presents a systematic outline of up-to-date research on thermal transport in electrochemical energy storage systems Gives readers an overview of thermal transport (both experimental and theoretical) in supercapacitors (macro- and micro-supercapacitors) in academic research Examines thermal transport in commercial industrial energy storage systems, particularly supercapacitors, used in all-electric vehicles and hybrid electric vehicles Identifies new trends in materials, fabrication and packaging design for high-performance energy storage systems under different operating conditions Includes supplementary material: sn.pub/extras
Guoping Xiong
Batteries and Fuel Cells Energy Storage Systems Equivalent Circuit Models Power Density Renewable Energy Storage Supercapacitor Ageing Thermal Management Thermal Runaway Thermal Transport Ultracapacitors and Supercapacitors