Abstract:
An active balancing and battery charging system for a battery including a plurality of packs made up of cells. An H-bridge circuit having a nominal system voltage as an input generates a square wave output to a plurality of step-down transformers each associated with a pack, where the plurality of step-down transformers provide an active balancing voltage of about the nominal pack voltage. Each pack may include a balancing transformer including a common primary coil receiving the active balancing voltage from the associated step-down transformer or the pack itself. The balancing transformer also includes a plurality of secondary coils each associated with the respective plurality of cells of the pack. A voltage induced in the secondary coils causes a discrete charge current to flow to any cells in the pack that are undercharged relative to other cells.

Description:
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION 
       [0001]    The present application claims priority under 35 U.S.C. §119(e) to provisional application No. 61/579,928 titled “Apparatus and Method for Active Balancing of Series Cells and Series Packs in a Battery System,” filed on Dec. 23, 2011, and which is hereby incorporated by reference herein. 
     
    
     BACKGROUND 
       [0002]    Larger and evermore complex battery systems composed of many individual cells are being constructed to provide larger voltages and powers, such as used in electric and hybrid vehicles, backup stationary power for computing centers, homes and whole neighborhoods. Dividing the battery into packs of smaller groups of cells can be advantageous to assembly, safety, servicing and maintenance. However, large battery systems composed of one or many cells in parallel (a module), then connected in series configurations for higher voltages, typically are limited by the weakest module and/or cell in the amount of current that the battery system can supply. Battery management systems have been developed to balance these modules so they remain as close to equal charge as possible to provide the best performance. As these batteries are constructed with larger voltages, it is recommended to break the battery into separated lower voltage packs connected in series, so each pack works at reduced voltages, allowing lower cost and often fewer components to be used in the construction. Active balancing is more efficient than passive load balancing of cells in maintaining optimal battery condition. 
       SUMMARY 
       [0003]    Aspects of the present disclosure involve active balancing apparatus including a battery system having a nominal system voltage. The battery system may further comprise a plurality of packs including a plurality of cells. The packs have nominal voltages that when added substantially equal the nominal system voltage. The balancing apparatus further includes an H-bridge circuit having the nominal system voltage as an input where the H-bridge generates a differential alternating square wave voltage output to a plurality of step-down transformers each associated with a pack and where the plurality of step-down transformers provide an active balancing voltage of about the associated nominal pack voltage. Finally, the apparatus also includes a plurality of balancing transformers each associated with a respective pack, the plurality of balancing transformers each including a common primary coil receiving the active balancing voltage from the associated step-down transformer or the pack, and a plurality of secondary coils each associated with the respective plurality of cells of the pack. 
         [0004]    Aspects of the present disclosure also involve a charge balancing circuit comprising a transformer including a primary winding and a plurality of secondary windings with the primary winding coupled across the battery system and the plurality of secondary windings each connected across a respective discrete portion of a battery pack. The charge balancing circuit also includes a plurality of diodes coupled between the plurality of secondary windings and the respective discrete portion of the battery pack. Finally, the charge balancing circuit also may include at least one switch configured to selectively control current flow from the battery system through the primary winding whereby discontinuing a current flow through the primary winding causes charge current to flow into at least one of the plurality of discrete portions, wherein the at least one discrete portion has a lesser charger relative to other portions. 
     
    
     
       FIGURE DESCRIPTIONS 
         [0005]      FIG. 1A  is a drawing showing an active battery pack balancing circuit with various monitoring and rectifying techniques. 
           [0006]      FIG. 1B  is a drawing of a half-wave rectifier that may be employed in the circuit illustrated in  FIG. 1A . 
           [0007]      FIG. 2  is a drawing showing interconnect wiring and an external charge balancing supply drive circuit that may be used to supply charge power to the battery pack balancing circuit illustrated in  FIG. 1A . 
       
    
    
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION 
       [0008]    One aspect of this disclosure involves an active balancing method and charging architecture specifically designed for a flexible number of battery packs for different applications, with a combination of central and independent monitoring and control. With battery circuitry broken up between several packs, a charge balancing scheme is needed within each pack. Aspects of the present disclosure use a combination of either internal or external power to actively balance each cell or module in a pack and also each pack in a battery system. A flexible means to easily adjust the system voltage and the number of packs for different applications is also described. 
         [0009]    For purposes of illustration, an active balancing architecture is illustrated in  FIGS. 1 and 2 , along with other features. The system shown in  FIG. 2  involves a representative 153.6 volt battery  10  where the battery voltage is achieved by connecting four (4) 38.4 volt battery packs  12 A- 12 D in series. Each pack, in this representative example, includes twelve (12) cells (labeled cell 1 -cell 12 ) or modules of 3.2 volts each, also connected in series. The active balancing circuit illustrated in  FIG. 1  includes one of the four packs and the 12 cells of the one pack. 
         [0010]    To obtain a 153.6 volt pack, the four 38.4 volt packs are connected in series as shown in  FIG. 2 . A balancing power bus  14  is coupled between a single H-bridge  36  pack drive and the four packs  12 A- 12 D. The power bus provides power to a transformer T 1  ( FIG. 1 ) of each pack to provide balancing. While each pack could have its own H-bridge to drive each transformer, fewer parts are needed if, as in the example of  FIG. 2 , only one drive circuit is used. The H-bridge forms part of a battery charger  22  that is used to provide charge current to the battery for the purpose of charging the pack. The battery charger receives power from some external source. Generally speaking, an H-bridge includes four switches H 1 -H 4 , connected in an H-bridge configuration, where each switch may be controlled. The switches may involve include one or more switches in parallel, and may include MOSFET devices with integrated or separate diodes and or capacitors across the drain and source. In the illustrated example, a link capacitor  38  is applied across the H-bridge. Other forms of inverters, bridges or H-bridge configurations may also be used. The H-bridge  36  supplies a controllable square wave or other time varying signal to the balancing power bus  14 , and the balancing power bus provides isolated charge power to the collection of four sub-packs. 
         [0011]    In one example, each pack ( 12 A- 12 D 0  has 2 terminals, labeled A and B, respectively. Each A terminal is connected with a first common line  16  of the bus  14 , and each B terminal is connected with a second common line  18  of the bus  14 . Similarly, the first common line of the bus is coupled with the H-bridge  16  between gates H 1  and H 2  of the bridge, and the second common line of the bus is coupled between gates H 3  and H 4  of the bridge. An inductor L 1  may be included between H 1 , H 2  and the first common line  16 . 
         [0012]    Not shown in the drawings are communications and cabling between a central controller  20  and the individual battery packs  12 A- 12 D, along with detailed control and monitoring circuits such as microprocessors, voltage and current monitoring. As illustrated, the central controller may control battery charging by providing appropriate control signals to the switches H 1 -H 4  of the H-bridge (e.g., PWM signals) may monitor and use measured voltages and currents from the system, and may provide control signals and receive information from individual pack controllers  24 . Many such circuits and devices are applicable and some representative examples and/or functionality are described below. 
         [0013]    Before describing the operation of active balancing circuit, the general meaning of an unbalanced battery will be described. Generally speaking, a battery is unbalanced when cells or packs that form the battery have different states of charge. Often, a battery becomes unbalanced as it cycles through charge and discharge cycles, and small differences in individual cell performance becomes exaggerated, and those differences are reflected in the state of charge differences amongst the cells that form the pack. When such a condition exists, battery performance is degraded as the battery itself, packs and cells, may not fully charge, may overcharge, may not fully discharge, may overdischarge, etc. Each of these conditions involves suboptimal battery performance and/or may damage the battery, packs, and/or individual cells. In the illustrated architecture and as discussed in more detail below, with or without a battery charger, the system could be commanded to balance itself resulting in the cells having substantially the same state of charge. Balancing with the battery charger involves supplying a charge current for an external source to the packs or cells to charge those targeted cells that are below some level. Balancing without the battery charger involves moving charge current from a cell with a higher charge to those cells with a lower charge. The two modes may be used alone or in combination, meaning charge current may be moved among cells in conjunction with charge current supplied from an external source through the battery charger. 
         [0014]    Referring to  FIG. 1 , one mode of active balancing will now be described. First, it should be noted that the cells (cell 1 -cell 12 ) are connected in series. The local pack controller  24  receives an external charge controller command, such as from the battery charger, to balance itself. Alternatively, the pack controller may be programmed or otherwise configured to balance itself based on various possible criteria such as detecting that the pack is unbalanced at the completion of a charge cycle or during a charge cycle, or simply as a set schedule. A higher voltage measurement on one cell as compared to another cell may be indicative of a charge disparity among the cells. Other factors may also be used in detecting a charge imbalance. 
         [0015]    For purposes of discussion using the monitoring circuitry, assume the pack controller  24  determines that Cell 4 &#39;s voltage is sufficiently lower than all the others to require balancing. Any number of cells, however, might be unbalanced and in some instances some cells will be considered to have too high a voltage whereas other cells might be considered to have too low voltage. A transformer T 1  with one (1) primary winding and as many equally wound secondary windings as there are cell modules is used and is operated as a shared inductor in flyback mode. In this example, there are 12 secondary windings (S 1 -S 12 ), one for each of the 12 cells in the example 38.4 volt pack. The local pack controller or other circuitry connects the primary coil P 1  of transformer T 1  across the total pack voltage, minus the voltage drop of an isolation diode D 1  using a suitable switch SW 1  such as a MOSFET, BJT or other device. Current in the primary of T 1  may be monitored with a suitable sensor such as a resistor  26  at point RC, a current transformer  28  at point CT, a hall-effect sensor or other device. When the current in T 1  has reached an acceptable value, the switch SW 1  is opened and the magnetic field that was induced around the primary, collapses around all of the secondary windings S 1 -S 12  until the voltages at each exceeds that of a cell plus the voltage drop of a Schottky diode  30  coupled between the secondary windings S 1 -S 12  and the respectively associated cells cell 1 -cell 12 . For this example Cell 4  has the lowest voltage, so its Shottky diode  30 D will start conducting before any of the others until Cell 4 &#39;s voltage equals that of the other cells within the pack. When the voltages across all of the secondary windings have dropped low enough to turn off all of the diodes  30  connected to them, any excess energy in the transformer core will attempt to discharge through the primary P 1  and will be dissipated through the diode D 2 . This operation is repeated as many times as necessary to achieve a balanced battery pack with all cells at about the same voltage. The charging voltage F may optionally be monitored by means of an additional secondary winding S 13  that will reflect the voltage of the charging cell but has no means to determine which cell is being charged. Monitoring circuitry, however, can assess which cell or cells are being balanced. 
         [0016]    Referring to  FIG. 1 , instead of the individual battery pack&#39;s own power being used to balance cell charges, external power may be used to accomplish balancing in a similar fashion. With the addition of a transformer T 2 , which may be a high frequency transformer, a rectifier  32  including diodes R and capacitor C 1  in each pack and a shared external transformer H-Bridge Drive circuit, external charge balancing power is provided. 
         [0017]    Using the total battery voltage, in this case about 150 volts, alternately switch on H 1  and H 4 , then H 2  and H 3  using hard or soft switching techniques. If there isn&#39;t enough stray inductance from the transformers, optional inductor L 1  may be added to enable phase shifting for soft switching. An alternating square wave is sent down the pair of wires A and B to each battery pack wherein it passes through transformer T 2  and is rectified using a full wave rectifier including transformer T 2  and rectifier  30  in conjunction with capacitor C 1 . Alternatively, a half wave rectifier as shown in  FIG. 1B  may be used in place of the full wave configuration of  FIG. 1A . In one specific implementation, the turns ratio of the transformer T 2  is such that with the source square-wave voltage (the voltage between points C and D ( FIG. 1 ) is always greater than that of a fully charged pack. In this manner, the diode D 1  is reversed biased preventing power from being drawn from the pack cells themselves when external power is available. If a charger, such as charger  22 , is applied to the whole battery at this time, the diode D 1  prevents the battery from pulling power out of itself to balance and instead uses the supply. Each pack may be commanded to balance or not, to a specific cell voltage. Active balancing may also take place during charging or as in the case of hybrid or electric vehicles, while driving and regenerative braking. 
         [0018]    Although the present invention has been described with respect to particular apparatuses, configurations, components, systems and methods of operation, it will be appreciated by those of ordinary skill in the art upon reading this disclosure that certain changes or modifications to the embodiments and/or their operations, as described herein, may be made without departing from the spirit or scope of the invention. Accordingly, the proper scope of the invention is defined by the appended claims. The various embodiments, operations, components and configurations disclosed herein are generally exemplary rather than limiting in scope.