Inside Nimh Battery Technology
Inside Nimh Battery Technology
Inside Nimh Battery Technology
The ability of the cell to provide power (in watts W (voltage x current)) is determined
by many factors including the chemical makeup of the cell, cell construction,
temperature, etc.
A battery is technically a string of electrochemical cells connected in series to achieve a
higher voltage. However, for convenience we shall call a cell and also series and
parallel connected cells a battery as is a common convention. Batteries may be
referenced both by the chemistry of the cells as well as the voltage developed.
Basic Components of an Electrochemical Cell
The anode is the electrode where oxidation takes place and electrons are fed out of the
cell into the external circuit. The cathode is the electrode where reduction takes place
and the electrons from the external circuit return to the cell.
In a primary cell, the anode is also the negative electrode and the cathode is the
positive electrode. In a secondary cell, when on charge the negative electrode
becomes the cathode and the positive electrode becomes the anode. Because of the
reversal of roles in a secondary cell, the electrodes will be referred to as either positive
or negative (which never changes) and the direction of current flow (charge or
discharge) will be specified.
The electrolyte serves as the path for completing the electrical circuit inside of the cell
via the transport of ions from one electrode to the other.
The reactants making up the electrodes (the active material) may be gaseous, liquid, or
solid. The electrolyte may be a liquid or a solid.
Figure 1 shows a schematic of an electrochemical cell on charge and discharge.
Most battery technologies use an electrochemical couple consisting of a column 1A, 2A,
1B, or 2B metal electrode and a metal oxide or a column 6A (or 7A) elemental
electrode. Electrodes such as Air (O2) are created by using a conductive structure with
a catalyst for promoting the reaction.
The following table shows a comparison of various secondary battery systems along
with their theoretical and practical energy densities. Looking at the following table one
notices a vast difference between the theoretical specific energy density and the
practical specific energy density of the various battery types. This disparity is due to the
fact that the theoretical energy density only looks at the active materials involved in the
electrochemical reaction within the battery and disregards the other components
necessary for the battery to function such as electrode structural material, battery
enclosure, electrolyte, separator materials, terminals, etc.
Table 1. Secondary Battery Technology Comparison (1)
Battery
System
Negative
Electrode
Positive
Electrode
Electrolyte
Nominal
Voltage
(V)
Theoretical
Specific Energy
(Wh/kg)
252
Practical
Specific
Energy
(Wh/kg)
35
Practical
Energy
Density
(Wh/L)
70
Lead-Acid
Pb
PbO2
H2SO4
2.0
Nickel Iron
Fe
NiOOH
KOH
1.2
313
45
60
Nickel
Cadmium
Cd
NiOOH
KOH
1.2
244
50
75
Nickel
Hydrogen
H2
NiOOH
KOH
1.2
434
55
60
Nickel
Metal
Hydride
Nickel Zinc
Silver Zinc
H
(as MH)
NiOOH
KOH
1.2
70
170
Zn
Zn
NiOOH
AgO
KOH
KOH
1.6
1.9
278 800
(depends on
MH)
372
524
60
100
120
180
Zinc Air
Zn
O2
KOH
1.1
1320
110
80
Zinc
Bromine
Zn
Bromine
Complex
ZnBr2
1.6
450
70
60
Lithium Ion
Li
LixCoO2
PC or DMC
w/ LiPF6
4.0
766
120
200
Sodium
Sulfur
Na
Beta
Alumina
2.0
792
100
>150
Sodium
Nickel
Chloride
Na
NiCl2
Beta
Alumina
2.5
787
90
>150
Major Issues
Heavy, Low
Cycle Life,
Toxic
Materials
Heavy, High
Maintenance
Toxic
materials,
maintenance,
cost
Cost, High
Pressure
Hydrogen,
Bulky
Cost
Low cycle life
Very
expensive,
limited life
Low Power,
limited cycle
life, bulky
Low Power,
hazardous
components,
bulky
Safety Issues,
Calendar Life,
Cost
High
Temperature
Battery,
Safety, Low
Power
Electrolyte
High
Temperature
Operation,
Low Power
The NiMH battery has many significant advantages over other rechargeable
technologies including cycle life, safety, and non-hazardous materials. The NiMH
battery has continuously evolved over the past 20 years from existence only as a
laboratory curiosity to a highly developed product for a variety of applications including
consumer products, electric vehicles, hybrid electric vehicles, and stationary power
applications. All commercial NiMH batteries use negative (metal hydride) electrode
materials which are patented. The Cobasys NiMH batteries utilizing these materials
are among the most advanced prismatic NiMH batteries on the market today.
The NiMH Battery
The NiMH battery is termed an alkaline storage battery due to the use of potassium
hydroxide (KOH) as the electrolyte. Electrically, NiMH batteries are very similar to
nickel cadmium batteries. Rechargeable alkaline storage batteries are a dominant
factor in the market for several technically important reasons:
The electrolyte, which is an aqueous solution of potassium hydroxide, has a very high
conductivity and usually does not enter into the cell reaction to any significant extent.
The electrolyte concentration (and therefore a major component of cell resistance)
remains fairly constant over the entire range of state of charge or discharge. These
factors lead to a battery with high power performance and long cycle life.
The active materials in the NiMH battery are composed of metal compounds or metallic
oxides which (in a charged state) are relatively good conductors. The nickel oxide
hydroxide electrode only exchanges a proton in the charge-discharge reaction and the
electron transfer is very rapid contributing to high power capacity. The small change in
size of the electrode between charge and discharge also results in greater mechanical
stability and thus longer cycle life.
NiMH batteries can be fabricated in virtually any size from tens of milliampere hours to
hundreds of ampere hours or more. Due to the compatibility of steel with the KOH
electrolyte, the batteries can be manufactured in steel cans which are very rugged and
exhibit good thermal performance. Large energy storage systems for a variety of
applications from transportation to stationary backup power have been successfully
applied using NiMH technology. This versatility is constantly leading to new
applications for NiMH batteries where performance and environmental factors are of
utmost importance.
Positive Electrode
The positive electrode of the NiMH battery is nickel hydroxide. This is a very well
developed electrode material with almost 100 years of history and development since it
is the same composition as it is for NiCd batteries. Nickel based alkaline batteries are
attractive since the nickel electrode can be fabricated with very large surface areas
which lead to high capacities and high current densities. The electrolyte does not enter
into the electrode reaction so that conductivity stays at a high level throughout the
usable capacity of the battery. In addition the nickel active material is insoluble in the
KOH electrolyte which leads to longer life and better abuse tolerance. Only a proton is
involved in the charge/discharge reaction leading to very small density changes and
improved mechanical stability of the electrode during cycling. Also the gravimetric and
volumetric energy densities are very good for the nickel electrode. (2)
The simplified nickel electrode reaction in the cell is:
Ni(OH )
+ OH
Ch
arg
Disch arg e
NiOOH + H O + e
Negative Electrode
The active material for the negative electrode in the NiMH battery is actually hydrogen,
the same as it is in a nickel hydrogen battery, except that the hydrogen ions (protons)
are stored in the metal hydride structure which also serves as the electrode. The metal
hydride can, depending on its composition, hold between 1% and 7% hydrogen by
weight. As a hydrogen storage material, the metal hydride is very efficient, achieving
better volumetric efficiency than liquid hydrogen. Todays practical materials for NiMH
batteries hold between 1% and 2% hydrogen by weight. (1)
Many elemental metal hydride materials exist but were not practical for battery
applications due to the high equilibrium pressure exhibited by these materials at room
temperature. This changed when intermetallic compounds were developed that
combined strong and weak hydride forming materials. Tailoring the metal hydrides for
the desired equilibrium pressure and other chemical properties is achieved by adjusting
the ratio between these two types of material components.
Intermetallic compounds are alloys of two or more metallic elements with narrow bands
of integer stoichiometries. The compounds are divided into groups classified by AxBy
based on their composition and crystal structure (4). The A and B components can
each consist of a number of different elements in varying ranges of stoichiometry. The
variation of the components of the metal hydride allows the design of materials with the
desired characteristics for use in battery applications such as low equilibrium pressure,
resistance to corrosion, mechanical stability, reversibility, hydrogen storage ability, etc.
Table 2 shows some of the most common metal hydrides used for battery applications.
Table 2. Metal Hydride Classes and Materials (4)
AxBy Class
(Basis)
Components
Storage Capability
(mA/g)
Comments
AB5
(LaNi5)
300
AB2
(TiNi2)
A: V, Ti
B: Zr, Ni (+Cr, Co, Fe, Mn)
400
AB
(ZrNi)
A2B
(Ti2Ni)
A: Zr, Ti
B: Ni, Fe, Cr, V
A: Mg, Ti
B: Ni
Note: Mischmetal is a naturally occurring mixture of rare earth elements and other metals.
The Cobasys NiMH batteries use either an AB2 or an AB5 metal hydride alloy for the
negative electrode. The reactions for the negative electrode can be written as:
+ H 2O + e
Ch
arg
Disch arg e
MH + OH
+ Ni(OH ) + H 2 O MH + ( NiOOH H 2 O
Ch
arg
Disch arg e
Charge
1.5
Cell Voltage
1.3
Discharge
1.1
0.9
0.7
0.5
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
State of Charge
The NiMH battery also has over-charge and over-discharge reactions that allow the
battery to handle abuse without adverse effects. This is called the oxygen cycle for
overcharge. On over-discharge the battery has the hydrogen cycle (1).
The oxygen cycle functions as follows on overcharge:
2 H 2O + O2 + 4 e
For the positive electrode: 4 OH
For the negative electrode: 2 H 2O + O2 + 4 e
4 OH
Net is no reaction, only heat generation equal to the energy input and an increase in cell
pressure.
The hydrogen cycle functions as follows on over-discharge:
For the positive electrode: 2 H 2O + 2 e
H 2 + 2 OH
For the negative electrode: H 2 + 2 OH
2 H 2O + 2 e
Net result is no reaction but heat and pressure are generated in the cell.
In an extreme case of overcharge the cell will become pressurized enough to cause the
safety vent to open and release the excess pressure, thus avoiding the danger of cell
rupture.
The NiMH battery is capable of supplying a large quantity of power to the load. Specific
powers of 200 W/kg to greater than 1000 W/kg are available from Cobasys NiMH
products depending on the design and application requirements. NiMH batteries exhibit
a very linear resistance characteristic for discharge and charge at any given SOC. This
makes modeling the battery behavior easy for applications in electric vehicles and other
high energy and high power applications.
The Cobasys NiMH batteries have demonstrated cycle life of greater than one thousand
80% Depth of Discharge (DOD) charge discharge cycles. In applications such as hybrid
electric vehicles which utilize very shallow charge-discharge cycles 200,000 to 300,000
cycles have been achieved.
Self Discharge
PERCENT CAPACITY
RETAINED
The NiMH batteries, like all batteries, have a certain level of self discharge that occurs
when the battery is at rest. The self discharge characteristic typical of an available
electric vehicle type battery module from Cobasys is shown in figure 6. The factors
contributing to self discharge include the energy used by the oxygen cycle at high states
of charge. The contribution to self discharge from the oxygen cycle is negligible below
about 70% state of charge. Longer term contributions to self discharge are caused by
chemical ion shuttles which continuously discharge the cell over longer periods of time.
The rate of the self discharge is highly dependent on the temperature of the cell. Higher
temperatures yield higher self discharge rates.
110%
100%
90%
80%
70%
60%
50%
40%
0
48
96
144
192
240
21.1C (70F)
37.8C (100F)
Cobasys NiMH batteries have been successfully field tested in many electric and hybrid
vehicle applications providing millions of miles of road experience to draw upon. Our
batteries enabled the GM EV1 to have a real world range of 250 km and the Chevrolet
S10 achieved a range of 110 to 130 km with full payload. Many other heavy duty
vehicle applications in pure electric busses and hybrid electric vehicles also are
demonstrating the powerful and long lasting performance of the NiMH battery systems.
Standby power systems are also an ideal area of application for the larger NiMH
batteries. They have a variety of advantages over the traditional lead acid batteries that
have been traditionally employed in these applications. The advantages include:
Small Footprint
Long Life Cycle Characteristics
Low Maintenance
High Power
Light Weight
Safe
Good Thermal Performance
Configurable Design
SERIES 1000
8.8 Ah 12 V High Power Module Design
Liquid Cooled Package
Configurable as cassettes up to 48 V
Designed for Light duty vehicle to large SUV needs
SERIES 4500
45 Ah High Power Cell Design
Liquid Cooled Package
12 V Monoblock Module
HEV and EV applications, such as transit buses / military
SERIES 9500
85 Ah 12 V Cell Design
Air Cooled Package
Ultra long full depth cycle life
Configurable Module Capacity by Paralleling Cells
Heavy Duty HEV, EV and all stationary
applications
The NiMH battery is a versatile solution for many diverse applications due to its long life,
environmentally friendly materials, high power and energy, and safe application.
Incredible progress has been made since the early days of development of NiMH
technology to today where Cobasys is producing the worlds most advanced prismatic
NiMH batteries available proven in a host of demanding applications.
References
1. D. A. Corrigan, Introduction to NiMH Battery Technology, June 21, 2002.
2. Modern Battery Technology, Center for Professional Advancement, 1995, Dr. Forrest A.
Trumbore ed.
3. M. A. Fetcenko, S. Venkatesan, S. R. Ovshinsky, Selection of Metal Hydride Alloys For
Electrochemical Applications, Electrochemical Society Proceedings Volume 92-5, pp. 141-167.
4. D. Berndt, Maintenance-Free Batteries, 2
nd
edition, 1997.