Sigma-point Kalman filter application on estimating battery SOC

Author(s):  
Liye Wang ◽  
Lifang Wang ◽  
Chenglin Liao ◽  
Jun Liu
Keyword(s):  
2008 ◽  
Vol 18 (7-8) ◽  
pp. 663-675 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marc-André Beyer ◽  
Wolfgang Grote ◽  
Gunter Reinig

2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (5) ◽  
pp. 1896 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chi Nguyen Van ◽  
Thuy Nguyen Vinh

This paper deals with the state of charge (SoC) estimation of a lithium-ion battery pack (LiBP) connected by some cells in series and parallel. The voltage noise, noise and current bias of current through the LiBP are taken into account in the SoC estimation problem. In order to describe the cell dynamic more accurately, especially for practical applications with charge and discharge amplitude varying suddenly, in this paper we use the second dynamic order model of the cell to estimate the SoC of the LiBP. By applying the sigma point Kalman filter (SPKF), the average SoC of the pack and bias current of current measurement are estimated by first estimator; the second estimator estimates the SoC differences of the cell modules from average SoC of the pack. The SoC of the cell modules are the sum of average SoCs of the pack and the SoC differences. By only using two estimators, the calculation complexity for SoC estimation is more reduced; this is very useful for the LiBP, which has the number of cells connected in a large series. This method was applied for the pack of SAMSUNG ICR18650-22P connected by seven cell modules; the cell modules were connected by nine cells in parallel; the LiBP was charged and discharged with amplitude varying suddenly. The estimated SoC of seven cell modules is smaller than 2% for a temperature operating range typically −5 °C to 45 °C. The comparison of the accuracy of SoC estimation based on the first and the second order dynamic models is made; the result shows that the SoC estimation used the second order dynamic model is more exact.


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