Latest News

A Better Insulation Test: Decreasing Risk of Electrical Shorts in Lithium Ion Battery Cells [VIDEO]

On occasion, an electrical short can develop inside a lithium ion battery cell after passing production tests due to burrs or particles on the positive electrode reaching the negative electrode after inflation occurs. If these cells that are susceptible to failure pass through to the end user, the results could be catastrophic. Fire or explosion in lithium ion battery cells has developed into a serious topic with solutions for its prevention being more critical than ever. With current testing instrumentation, such as hipot or IR testers, detecting minor partial discharge or flashover inside the cell is almost impossible. Chroma has developed a solution to mitigate these occurrences in the dry cell stage.

This seminar will cover new testing procedures and equipment to monitor voltage and current in order to detect minor partial discharge or flashover inside the cell resulting in lower risk to the manufacturer and end user.

More Recent Posts

High-Precision Three-Electrode Analysis: Solving Lithium Plating Risks in Li-ion Batteries During Fast Charging to Establish a New Safety Standard for Automotive Batteries

As electric vehicle technology advances into the fast charging era, lithium-ion batteries face increasingly severe challenges regarding safety and lifespan under high-rate charging. One of the most critical concerns is the phenomenon of lithium plating—when the charging current is too high or the temperature is too low, lithium-ions fails to intercalate effectively into the anode and instead deposit as metallic lithium on the surface of the graphite.

Read More »