329 research outputs found

    Hydrogen storage material, electrochemically active material, electrochemical cell and electronic equipment

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    The invention relates to a hydrogen storage material comprising an alloy of magnesium. The invention further relates to an electrochemically active material and an electrochemical cell provided with at least one electrode comprising such a hydrogen storage material. Also, the invention relates to electronic equipment comprising such an electrochemical cell

    Hydrogen storage material, electrochemically active material, electrochemical cell and electronic equipment

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    The invention relates to a hydrogen storage material comprising an alloy of magnesium. The invention further relates to an electrochemically active material and an electrochemical cell provided with at least one electrode comprising such a hydrogen storage material. Also, the invention relates to electronic equipment comprising such an electrochemical cell

    Modeling All-Solid-State Li-Ion Batteries

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    The Etching of InP in HCl Solutions: A Chemical Mechanism

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    A comparison and accuracy analysis of impedance-based temperature estimation methods for Li-ion batteries

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    In order to guarantee safe and proper use of Lithium-ion batteries during operation, an accurate estimate of the battery temperature is of paramount importance. Electrochemical Impedance Spectroscopy (EIS) can be used to estimate the battery temperature and several EIS-based temperature estimation methods have been proposed in the literature. In this paper, we argue that all existing EIS-based methods implicitly distinguish two steps: experiment design and parameter estimation. The former step consists of choosing the excitation frequency and the latter step consists of estimating the battery temperature based on the measured impedance resulting from the chosen excitation. By distinguishing these steps and by performing Monte-Carlo simulations, all existing methods are compared in terms of accuracy (i.e., mean-square error) of the temperature estimate. The results of the comparison show that, due to different choices in the two steps, significant differences in accuracy of the estimate exist. More importantly, by jointly selecting the parameters of the experiment-design and parameter-estimation step, a more-accurate temperature estimate can be obtained. In case of an unknown State-of-Charge, this novel method estimates the temperature with an average absolute bias of View the MathML sourceC and an average standard deviation of View the MathML sourceC using a single impedance measurement for the battery under consideration
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