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Mechanical Behavior of Lithium-Ion Batteries and Fatigue Behavior of Ultrasonic Weld-Bonded Lap-Shear Specimens of Dissimilar Magnesium and Steel Sheets

Posted on:2015-02-21Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:University of MichiganCandidate:Lai, Wei-JenFull Text:PDF
GTID:1471390020451977Subject:Engineering
Abstract/Summary:
The mechanical behaviors of LiFePO4 battery cell and module specimens under in-plane constrained compression were investigated for simulations of battery cells, modules and packs under crush conditions. The experimental stress-strain curves were correlated to the deformation patterns of battery cell and module specimens. Analytical solutions were developed to estimate the buckling stresses and to provide a theoretical basis for future design of representative volume element cell and module specimens. A physical kinematics model for formation of kinks and shear bands in battery cells was developed to explain the deformation mechanism for layered battery cells under in-plane constrained compression. A small-scale module constrained punch indentation test was also conducted to benchmark the computational results. The computational results indicate that macro homogenized material models can be used to simulate battery modules under crush conditions.;Fatigue behavior and failure modes of ultrasonic spot welds in lap-shear specimens of magnesium and steel sheets with and without adhesive were investigated. For ultrasonic spot welded lap-shear specimens, the failure mode changes from the partial nugget pullout mode under low-cycle loading conditions to the kinked crack failure mode under high-cycle loading conditions. For adhesive-bonded and weld-bonded lap-shear specimens, the test results show the near interface cohesive failure mode and the kinked crack failure mode under low-cycle and high-cycle loading conditions, respectively. Next, the analytical effective stress intensity factor solutions for main cracks in lap-shear specimens of three dissimilar sheets under plane strain conditions were developed and the solutions agreed well with the computational results. The analytical effective stress intensity factor solutions for kinked cracks were compared with the computational results at small kink lengths. The results indicate that the computational results approach to the analytical solutions as the kink length decreases to a small value. Finally, the analytical stress intensity factor solutions for welds in lap-shear specimens of two dissimilar sheets were presented graphically and validated by finite element analyses for convenient fracture and fatigue analyses. The transition thickness ratios and weld widths for different combinations of dissimilar materials were also presented. Experimental results were presented to demonstrate the usefulness of the solutions for predicting failure locations.
Keywords/Search Tags:Specimens, Dissimilar, Behavior, Results, Stress intensity factor solutions, Failure, Battery, Sheets
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