DESIGN SOLUTIONS
AUTOMOTIVE
Monitor Your Electric Vehicle’s Battery with a Smart Sensor
Introduction
Electric vehicles are powered by huge battery banks, constructed
of long strings of batteries in series (Figure 1). These battery
banks, typically made up of lithium-ion (Li+) cells, can achieve
operating voltages higher than 800V. However, the materials
of this battery chemistry can be damaged if overcharged. Each
cell voltage must be monitored and, if necessary, appropriate
control methods must be applied to avoid overvoltage.
Excessive cell leakage current, overvoltage, undervoltage, and
extreme temperature can all lead to weaker performance or
even catastrophic failure.
storage of 100kWh (3.54Ah x 4.2V x 6720 cells). The series of
96 rows, each made of 70 cells in parallel, add up to a battery
voltage of 403.2V (96 rows x 4.2V), with a capacity of 248Ah
(100kWh/403.2V or 3.54Ah x 70 columns).
403.2V
MODULE 1
4.2V
1
2
70
ROW 1
IC1
ROW 12
TO THE DC/AC
INVERTER
MICRO
MODULE 8
%
ROW 85
IC8
%
6720
0V
Figure 1. Electric Car and Its Battery Pack
This article reviews the structure of a typical electric vehicle
(EV) battery and highlights many concerns associated with
its complexity and safety. We then introduce a novel battery
management system that overcomes these concerns, allowing
EV power system engineers to design with confidence.
EV Battery Structure
The typical EV battery depicted in Figure 2 is made of 6720
Li+ cells, managed by eight control modules. Each cell has a
capacity of 3.54Ah, adding up to a total battery nominal energy
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ROW 96
Figure 2. Daisy-Chained Battery Pack Stack and Control
This allows an EV to travel 300 miles at a speed of 50mph for 6
hours before exhausting the battery. The EV motor will draw an
average current of 41A (248Ah/6h).
Data Link
In the daisy-chain configuration of Figure 2, all the control
modules communicate serially with a central microprocessor
via IC1; isolation is required between the microprocessor and the
first module, and from one module to the next. Alternatively, in
1
an isolated controller area network (CAN) configuration, a more
cumbersome solution is necessary since each module requires
one microprocessor and a CAN IC, in addition to the BMS IC.
The data link must reliably operate in noisy high-power battery
environments, where both the high dV/dt supply noise and
common-mode current injection (induced by electromagnetic
fields) are present.
Cell Diagnostics
Many things can go wrong in a battery pack. Excessive current
leakage, high or low voltage, and extreme temperature of the
cells can all lead to weakened performance or even catastrophic
failure. The manifestation of these faults varies with the battery
cell configuration. In a series stack of cells, voltage variations
are more readily spotted, while in parallel configurations, the
leakage current becomes amplified. In a mix of series-parallel
configurations, like the one in Figure 2, deviations in leakage
current are more readily measured while voltage deviations
induced by a single bad cell are attenuated and require
measurements with a higher level of accuracy.
Cell Balancing
Li+ and lithium-polymer battery chemistries cannot be
overcharged without damaging their active materials. In a string
of cells in series, the state-of-charge (SoC) of each cell voltage
must be monitored, and if necessary, appropriate control methods
must be applied to avoid overvoltage due to overcharge. Cells in
parallel tend to be self-balancing since the parallel connection
holds all the cells at the same voltage preventing runaway
voltage of a single cell. Accordingly, in a matrix of cells such as in
Figure 2, the monitoring proceeds by a row of cells, rather than
a single cell. Each module in Figure 2 contains all the electronics
necessary to perform balancing by means of arrays of switches
and with resistors that are connected across the cell nodes.
Cell Voltage Measurement Accuracy
The accuracy of the cell voltage measurement is important for
safety reasons as well as for maximizing the battery capacity.
Every millivolt of inaccuracy ultimately translates into a
diminished utilization of battery capacity. Accuracy is one of the
parameters that weighs heavily in the battery’s state-of-health
(SoH) and SoC.
An Integrated Solution
Cell safety, diagnostics, and balancing are all addressed by a new
automotive smart sensor data acquisition IC. The MAX17843 is
a programmable, high-voltage, smart data-acquisition interface
with extensive features for safety with high integration and
battery monitoring. The analog front-end combines a 12-channel
voltage-measurement data-acquisition system with a highvoltage switch-bank input. Each of the eight modules in Figure 2 is
powered by a single MAX17843. Two auxiliary analog inputs can
be used to measure external thermistor components. A negative
temperature coefficient (NTC) thermistor can be configured
with the AUXIN analog inputs to accurately monitor module or
battery-cell temperature. A thermal-overload detector disables
the on-board linear regulator to protect the IC. A die-temperature
measurement is also available.
Resistive Cell Balancing
Cell balancing in the MAX17843 can be performed using any
of the 12 internal cell-balancing switches to discharge cells.
The cell-balancing current is limited by the external balancing
resistors (RBALANCE in Figure 3) and the internal balancing
switch resistance (RSW).
TO CELL n+1
SENSE
WIRE
RFILTER
Cn
CFILTER
RBALANCE
SWn
TO HVMUX
TO ALTMUX
BALSWEN
RBAL
FILTER
CELLn
BALANCING
SWITCH (n)
RBALANCE
SENSE
WIRE
SWn-1
HV
TO ALTMUX
RFILTER
CFILTER
Cn-1
TO HVMUX
AGND
TO CELL n-1
Figure 3. Battery Cell Balancing Network
The high-current (up to 400mA) integrated switches greatly
reduce BOM cost and increase reliability. They also enable a
simpler path to higher levels of ASIL certification.
Safety Level
Tight Voltage Measurement Accuracy
Automotive Safety Integrity Level (ASIL) is a risk classification
scheme defined by the ISO 26262 standard. There are four
levels of risk identified by the standards ASIL A through ASIL
D, with the latter corresponding to the lowest level of risk. An
ASIL-compliant IC is equipped with the necessary diagnostics to
detect specific fault conditions.
With its high accuracy (±2mV at +25°C at 3.6V), the MAX17843
more precisely measures the battery cell voltage, which helps
enhance the battery’s safety and capacity utilization (the SoC
and SoH).
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Daisy-Chain Communication
Conclusion
This highly integrated battery sensor incorporates a highspeed differential UART bus for robust daisy-chained serial
communication, designed for maximum noise immunity. The
daisy-chain method reduces cost and requires only a single
isolator between the lowest module and the host. DC-blocking
capacitors or transformers are used to isolate daisy-chain
devices that operate at different common-mode voltages.
Inexpensive capacitors can be used in the daisy chain between
modules (Figure 4), which reduces system cost.
We reviewed the structure of a typical EV battery, highlighting many
concerns associated with its complexity and safety. The MAX17843
12-channel, high-voltage, smart sensor data-acquisition interface
addresses these concerns thanks to a high level of integration,
superior safety standard compliance, high accuracy, a robust
communication protocol, and the ability to implement a low-noise,
cost-effective, capacitive-isolation daisy-chain communication link.
DAISY-CHAIN
DEVICE (n-1)
DAISY-CHAIN
DEVICE (n)
C40
15pF
R40
1.5kΩ
C42
2.2nF
600V
R50
47Ω
R41
1.5kΩ
C43
22nF
600V
R51
47Ω
RXLP
RXLN
C41
15pF
R43
100kΩ
R42
100kΩ
TXUP
TXUN
SIGNAL TRACES
OR WIRE
HARNESS
R44
47Ω
C50
R54
2.2nf 600V 1.5kΩ
R45
47Ω
C51
R55
2.2nF 600V 1.5kΩ
SIGNAL TRACES
OR WIRE
HARNESS
GNDL
R52
100kΩ
R53
100kΩ
CAN: Controller area network
EV: Electric vehicle
SoC: Battery state-of-charge is the available Ah capacity
expressed as a percentage of the rated capacity.
RXUP
RXUN
UART: Universal asynchronous transmitter receiver
C53
15pF
TXLN
ASIL: Automotive safety integrity level
SoH: State-of-health. A figure of merit of the condition
of the battery. Ideally a battery’s SoH starts at 100% and
decreases over time and use.
C52
15pF
TXLP
Glossary Tems
GNDL
Figure 4. UART Capacitive Isolation Between Modules
Learn more:
MAX17843 12-Channel, High-Voltage Smart Sensor DataAcquisition Interface
Safety Measures
The IC achieves superior safety standards by implementing
safety measures for all the functional blocks. The chip has
several digital and analog safety functions including:
•
Monitors various pins for opens or shorts.
•
Diagnoses the accuracy of the internal voltage reference
using a second voltage reference.
•
Detects if the HV supply has fallen below the undervoltage
threshold.
•
Checks for data transmission errors.
•
Diagnoses if the internal die temperature monitor will
generate an alert after it reaches its threshold.
The product’s compliance to ASIL D requirements is proven by
a quantitative safety assessment completed according to ISO
26262 based on these and other measurements.
Design Solutions No. 85
Rev 0; March 2018
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