Comparison of the Different Circuits Used for Balancing the Voltage of Supercapacitors: Studying Performance and Lifetime of Supercapacitors

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Comparison of the Different Circuits Used for Balancing the Voltage of Supercapacitors: Studying Performance and Lifetime of Supercapacitors Youssef Diab, Pascal Venet, Gérard Rojat To cite this version: Youssef Diab, Pascal Venet, Gérard Rojat. Comparison of the Different Circuits Used for Balancing the Voltage of Supercapacitors: Studying Performance and Lifetime of Supercapacitors. ESSCAP, Nov 2006, Lausanne, Switzerland. pp.on CD, 2006. <hal-004482> HAL Id: hal-004482 https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-004482 Submitted on 27 Aug 2009 HAL is a multi-disciplinary open access archive for the deposit and dissemination of scientific research documents, whether they are published or not. The documents may come from teaching and research institutions in France or abroad, or from public or private research centers. L archive ouverte pluridisciplinaire HAL, est destinée au dépôt et à la diffusion de documents scientifiques de niveau recherche, publiés ou non, émanant des établissements d enseignement et de recherche français ou étrangers, des laboratoires publics ou privés.

Comparison of the Different Circuits Used for Balancing the Voltage of Supercapacitors: Studying Performance and Lifetime of Supercapacitors Yasser Diab, Pascal Venet, Gerard Rojat CEGELY UMR-CNRS 5005, Université Lyon Bâtiment Omega, 43 bld du novembre 98 69622 Villeurbanne Cedex, France cegely@cegely.univ-lyon.fr Abstract The main disadvantage of using supercapacitors in the field of energy storage systems is their limited voltage due to technology limits. To resolve this problem, these components are usually applied in series to reach the suitable voltage. However the tolerance in these components characteristics leads to imbalanced voltage during the chargedischarge cycle. This may influence adversely the supercapacitors lifetime. To avoid this phenomenon, balancing circuits have to be employed. This turned out to be very useful in improving the performance and extending the lifetime of supercapacitors and the reliability of energy storage system as a whole. Keywords: Supercapacitor, overvoltage, balancing circuits, temperature, manufacturing tolerance, aging behavior, life expectancy, efficiency. balancing circuits will be analyzed in detail, in addition to the performance and lifetime of supercapacitors [, 2, 3]. II. CAUSES OF SUPERCAPACITORS NON IDENDICAL PARAMETRES The internal parameters of supercapacitors (ESR, capacitance and self-discharge rate) vary in accordance with the following conditions: A. Manufacturing dispersion in supercapacitors parameters: Parameters dispersion of supercapacitors produced by the same manufacturer can reach ± 20% for capacitance and ± 25% for ESR. A study was conducted on four components which belong to a series manufacturing (Maxwell 2600F 2.5V), tolerances were appeared on capacitance (5%) and on ESR (3%). Figure shows these dispersions on Nyquist plan [2, 3]. I. INTRODUCTION Supercapacitors offer interesting electrical characterizations and high lifetime cycling compared to that of batteries. They appear well suited to automotive advanced applications to boost the battery especially in a hybrid electric vehicle: They allow to provide the necessary power for acceleration and to recuperate the braking energy. ESR ω C Due to decomposition voltage of the organic electrolyte of approximately 3V, the maximum cellvoltage of supercapacitors is limited. A supercapacitor module is formed by several serial cells in series to obtain voltages suitable for applications. For different reasons, the internal parameters of supercapacitors (capacitance, ESR, and self-discharge rate) of a module may vary. These variations give raise to unequal voltage distribution during charge-discharge cycles and overvoltage may appear on cells. The causes of supercapacitors parameters tolerances and Fig. : Supercapacitors parameters manufacturing tolerances The dispersion of supercapacitors self-discharge rate can influence the cells-voltage distribution especially in applications with low duty-cycle. Figure 2 shows that the four aforementioned components did not have the same self-discharge

rate, consequently a difference in the cells-voltage has appeared. U (V ) 2,5 2,45 2,4 2,35 2,3 2,25 2,2 2,5 sc sc3 sc2 sc4 III. ESTIMATE OF LIFE EXPECTANCY OF SUPERCAPACITORS Operating voltage and ambient temperature largely influence the life expectancy of the supercapacitors. Therefore the life expectancy can be estimated by an exponential function of these variables (operating voltage and ambient temperature) as given by equation according to figure 4 [3]. T exp ( U, θ ) = C. e U θ ( + ) C 2 C 3 () 2, 2,05 2 0 500 000 500 2000 2500 3000 B. Temperature influence t (min) Fig. 2 : Self-discharge of supercapacitors The ambient temperature has an effect on the supercapacitor behavior: the increase of ambient temperature causes slight increase in the supercapacitor capacitance, huge decrease in ESR as depicted in figure 3, and decrease in the selfdischarge rate [, 4].,8,6 C (T) / C (25 C) ESR (T ) / ESR (25 C) where U and θ are the cell voltage and the cell temperature, respectively. The constant parameters C to C 3 are derived from the relationship given in figure 4. Life expectancy (Years),4 %,2 0,8 0,6 0,4 0,2 0-25 -5-5 5 5 25 35 45 55 65 T ( C) Fig. 3: Variation of supercapacitor parameters with temperature C. Ageing behaviour The supercapacitor aging mechanisms result from electrical, mechanical or environmental stresses. Maximum operating voltage and temperature are therefore important factors on aging behavior of supercapacitors. At higher temperature, the aging processes are accelerated by the higher reactivity of the chemical components. At higher voltage impurities undergo a redox reaction. In addition, organic electrolyte starts to decompose, producing gas product, which can lead to the component destruction. This phenomenon may decrease the capacitance by 20%, and increase ESR by 00% and self-discharge rate [3, 5]. Fig. 4: Life expectancy of a supercapacitor in function of operating voltage and temperature The average life expectancy can be estimated by the accumulated useful life (wear) of a supercapacitor in function of a dynamic voltage profile ( u (t) ). As given by equation 2 t 0 and t are the starting and end time respectively. T av ( u( t), θ ) = t T t t0 exp Voltage (V) t 0 dt ( u( t), θ ) (2) IV. SUPERCAPACITOR MODEL AND EFFICIENCY OF VOLTAGE BALANCING CIRCUITS To get appropriate simulations a suitable model of supercapacitor was used. This model was selected because it can be trade-off between the precision and the simplicity of the conducted simulations. This model consists of the immediate and the delayed branches as well as the self- 2

discharge components. They include the leakage current (Rf ) and redox reaction (Rf 2 ), as depicted in figure 5 [6, 7]. Usc, I Charge-discharge cycle Waiting time between charge and discharge Immediate branch I = 400 A Usc Current charge-discharge In order to compare the performance of voltage balancing circuits, the efficiency of module is defined as given by equation 3. η = Self-discharge W W sc W sc eq Delayed branch Fig.5: Equivalent circuit model for a supercapacitor Maxwell 2600 F 2.5 V: R = 0.47 mω, R 2 =.96 Ω, C 2 = 76 F, C 3 =88.7 KF, Rf =.2 kf, Rf 2 =42.9 Ω, C (F) = 749 +573 U (3) with W sc is energy stored in supercapacitors and W eq is energy dissipated in voltage equalization circuits. V. BALANCING CIRCUITS In order to simplify the study two supercapacitors in series were employed with a capacity tolerance of ( C) 20%: C sc (F) =749 +573.U C sc2 (F) =399 +458.U 2 We proposed periodical charge-discharge cycle in following settings: constant current I = 400 A for charge and discharge, interval between chargedischarge 20 ks see figure 6. The charge was to reach an overvoltage value on the supercapacitor SC 2 (lower capacitance) of 2.8 V. This last is the surge voltage of the conducted supercapacitor given by the manufacture. Fig.6 : Cells-voltage with switched balancing circuits The tolerance of the supercapacitors parameters distributes cells-voltage unequally during chargedischarge cycles. An overvoltage may appear on the component SC 2. To redistribute and equalize the cells-voltage, various voltage equalization circuits were employed, which are based on two main concepts: dissipative and non-dissipative [3, 8]: V. DISSIPATIVE BALANCING CIRCUITS A. Passive balancing circuits A resistor is connected in parallel with each supercapacitor as shown in figure 7.a [3, 8]. It allows balancing cell-voltage by dissipating the supercapacitor energy manifested as overvoltage on supercapacitor (SC 2 ) by thermal effect. Equation 4 represents the estimate of resistor value for passive balancing circuits depending on maximum voltage U scmax and leakage current of supercapacitor I leakage (their corresponding values are U scmax = 2.8 V, I leakage = 5 ma ). USC max USC max 280 Ω= > R ( Ω ) > 50 Ω (4) 2. I 0. I leackage I =- 400 A leackage The value of the balancing resistors was chosen as 50 Ω in order to balance between the efficiency and the good balancing dynamic of voltage. But it can not equalize the cell-voltage quickly: it takes more than 5 ks to reach to the operating voltage 2.5 V (see figure 8). Fig.7: Cell balancing circuits a) resistor, b) Zener diodes, c) switched-resistor, d) DC/DC converter 3

Balancing circuit Without balancing circuits Passive Balancing circuits with R=50Ω Switched resistor balancing circuits with R=Ω DC/DC converters balancing circuits Component SC SC 2 SC SC 2 SC SC 2 SC SC 2 Average life expectancy (years) 7.4 37 3.5 6 6.0 6..2 6.0 Average life expectancy of module (years).4 3.5 6.0 6.0 η % 00 00 79 76 00 83 η module % 00 77 9 93 Tab. : Performance of balancing circuits without important decrease in efficiency. The last is almost independent of the value of the balancing resistor and current profile. U sc The requested time for cellvoltage reach to operating voltage with resistor of 50 Ω Fig.8: Cells-voltage with passive balancing circuits This type of balancing reduces the efficiency of the module depending on the value of the resistor and the applied current profile because of continuous leakage current in resistors. For value of low balancing resistor the efficiency can fall to the value of ten percents [9]. On the other hand, this solution can improve lightly the life expectancy of supercapacitors as shown in table [3]. B. Switched-resistors balancing circuits The general concept depends on adding a controlled switch to an equalization resistor to limit the energy dissipation as shown in figure 7.c. The switch turns on when cell-voltage goes beyond operating voltage and turns off when the level is lower than this voltage. Figure 9 shows that the cell-voltage ( ) takes a few minutes to reach to operating voltage (2.5 V) for a value of resistor Ω and there isn t any more thermal loss in the other cell (SC ) [, 3, 8]. The efficiency of this solution rises largely more than the solutions mentioned above. Life expectancy of supercapacitors increases according to the value of the equalization resistor as shown in table. However the using of these circuits adds extra costs due to the requirement of electronic components. To obtain a more effective balancing dynamic, we need to use value of resistors less than Ω U sc The requested time for cellsvoltage of component reach to operating voltage with resistor of Ω Fig.9: Cells-voltage with switched-resistors balancing circuits There is another dissipative balancing circuit uses the Zener diodes as shown in figure 7.b. This circuit equalizes cells-voltage according to Zenervoltage by dissipating the extra energy in thermal effect [3, 8, 9]. Therefore we could not find voltage and current of the Zener diodes suitable for our application. V.2 NON-DISSIPATIVE BALANCING CIRCUITS All the solutions mentioned above dissipate the energy in order to equalize the cells-voltage. Another type of voltage balancing circuits has been proposed, which employ buck-boost structures with/without transformer. These circuits transfer instantaneously the exceeding energy of cellsovervoltage to other cells in order to equalize cellsvoltage [8, 9]. A. Indirect balancing: current diverter using buck-boost converters The equivalent circuit is given in figure 7.d. It equalizes the cells-voltage locally by two consecutive supercapacitors, using a structure of buck-boost converter for each pair of supercapacitors. The balancing is realized as soon 4

as a difference of cells-voltage appears: the extra energy of supercapacitor SC 2 is stored firstly in the inductor (L = 0.5 µh), then transferred to supercapacitor SC using a switch with frequency (f=0 khz) and duty cycle (50%) as shown in figure 0. An important balancing current (60 A) had to be chosen to carry out the equalization of voltages in accordance with charging process. C. Direct balancing: current diverter using forward converters This solution depends on the direct transmission of energy: the transistor T 2 is switched on as soon as the voltage starts to be higher than U sc as shown in figure 2. This allows transferring some energy from SC 2 to SC. U sc Fig.0: Cells-voltage with buck-boost converters for balancing current 60 A, switched frequency 0kHZ, inductor 0.5 µh and duty cycle 50% The instantaneous transfer of energy related to overvoltage from SC 2 to SC leads to higher efficiency and life expectancy than other solutions as pointed out in table. The main disadvantage of these balancing circuits resides in the indirect energy transmission especially for the applications with a huge number of supercapacitors in series. This lowers both efficiency and the lifetime. Although the concept of this circuit is nondissipated, some losses may occur in the electronic components. In addition the use of converters (buck-boost) balancing circuits is costly [9, 0]. Fig. 2: Balancing circuits current diverter using forward converters Both of the previous balancing circuits equalize instantaneously the cells-voltage (see figure 3). For the selected model with two supercapacitors in series, we found the performance and the life expectancy of supercapacitors are close to the solution A (current diverter using buck-boost converters). This result was obtained for ideal transformers, but the use of real transformer causes losses in addition to those of the electronics components. This also means a lower efficiency and lower life expectancy [9, 0]. B. Direct balancing: flyback converters with distributed secondary The aim of using a transformer is to transfer directly the energy: the switch T turns on to allow storing some energy in primary of transformer, and then this energy is transferred to distributed secondary, via the diodes as shown in figure. Most of this energy is provided to cells-lowest voltage. U sc Fig 3 : Cells-voltage with flyback converter with distributed secondary Fig. : Balancing circuits: flyback converters with distributed secondary VI. CONCLUSION AND PERSPECTIVES Experiments and simulations were conducted to estimate the performance and the reliability of supercapacitors. Differences of supercapacitors parameters may appear, they may give raise to potential overvoltages. Several voltage balancing 5

circuits are employed to solve this problem: resistance, switched-resistors and static converters. Experimental results show that these circuits differ by their efficiency and their life expectancy: The balancing circuits with simple resistance improve lightly the life expectancy of the supercapacitors, but decrease their efficiency. Switched-resistors allow limiting the energy dissipation and improve significantly the life expectancy. The DC/DC converters balances circuits equalize instantaneously cells-voltage by redistributing the stored energy. This in turn increases the efficiency as well as life expectancy of supercapacitors. [8] V.V. Härri, E. Egger All-Purpose Circuitry Concept "SAM" Applications and Networking for Supercapacitors, 2nd Boostcap Meeting, 29. March 200, Fribourg, Switzerland. [9] P. Barrade, S. Pittet, and A. Rufer, Energy storage system using a series connection of supercapacitors, with an active device for equalizing the voltages, presented at the Int. Power Electronics Conf., Tokyo, Japan, 2000. [0] P. Barrade, Series Connection of Supercapacitors: Comparative Study of Solutions for the Active equalization of the Voltages, Electrimacs 2002, 7th International Conference on Modeling and Simulation of Electric Machines, Converters and Systems, 8-2 August, Ecole de Technologie Supérieure (ETS), Montréal, Canada. The estimation of the tolerance caused by the aging behaviour is underway with an explanation to the aging processes. The used equation estimates the life expectancy of supercapacitors depending on two main factors; the ambient temperature and the cells-voltage taking into account that the current effect was neglected. The direct effect of these factors is not clear on the aging processes but it may make the temperature of the components higher than the surrounding ambiance. We envisage tacking into account the current in the equation in order to achieve a better precision. We will realize this, in addition to a complete validation of the results obtained for balancing circuits in the near future. REFERENCES [] Do Yang Jung, Young Ho Kim, Ltd., Korea Development of Ultracapacitor Modules for 42 Volt Automotive Electrical Systems. J Power Sources, 2003, on pages: 4:366-373. [2] Schneuwly, A., Bartchschi, M., Hermann, V., Sartorelli, G., Gallay, R., & Kotz, R., BOOSTCAP Double-layer Capacitors for Peak Power Automotive Applications, Proceedings of the 2nd International Advanced Automotive Battery Conference, 2002. [3] Linzen, D. Buller, S. Karden, E. De Doncker, R.W. Analysis and Evaluation of Charge-Balancing Circuits on Performance, Reliability, and Lifetime of Supercapacitor Systems : Sept.-Oct. 2005, on pages: 35-4, Volume: 4, Issue: 5, Industry Applications, IEEE Transactions on. [4] W.Lajnef, O.Briat, S.Azzopardi, E.Woirgard, J-M Vinassa Ultracapacitor Electrical Modeling Using Temperature Dependent Parameters. ESSCAP 2004, Belfort-FRANCE. [5] V. Hermann, A. Schneuwly, R. Gallay: "High Performance Double layer Capacitor for Power Electronic Applications", 2nd Boostcap Meeting, 29. March 200, Fribourg Switzerland. [6] Z. Ding, P. Venet, H. Gualous, G. Rojat, A. Berthon Modeling of the Supercapacitors and Iinfluence of the Temperature during Self-discharge. ESSCAP 2004, Belfort- FRANCE. [7] B.W. Ricketts, C. Ton-That Self-discharge of carbon-based supercapacitors with organic electrolytes, CSIRO Telecommunications and Industrial Physics, Bradfield Road, Lindfield, NSW, 2070 Australi, 30 December 999. 6