Low Voltage Battery Monitoring for High Voltage Electric Vehicles

November 16, 2020

Story

Low Voltage Battery Monitoring for High Voltage Electric Vehicles

If you are not already driving an electric vehicle (EV)—hybrid electric vehicle (HEV), plug-in hybrid vehicle (PHEV), or all-electric vehicle—chances are, you may be soon.

EV Movers

If you are not already driving an electric vehicle (EV)—hybrid electric vehicle (HEV), plug-in hybrid vehicle (PHEV), or all-electric vehicle—chances are, you may be soon. Range anxiety has become a thing of the past. You can now help preserve the environment without worrying about being stuck in it. Governments around the world offer generous financial incentives to offset the premium prices of EVs, hoping to steer you away from buying internal combustion engine (ICE) vehicles. Some governments have taken the step of mandating auto manufacturers build and sell EVs, hoping the market will eventually be dominated by them, while others have drawn a more distinct line in the sand; Germany, for example, is already pushing to ban ICE vehicles by 2030.

For much of the automobile’s history, innovation has focused on improving fuel burning efficiency of the ICE, cleaning up emissions while providing a comfortable user experience. However, the vast majority of recent innovations in ICE automobiles are a direct result of advancements in electronics—improvements in chassis systems, power trains, autonomous and advanced driver assistance systems (ADAS), infotainment, and safety systems. EVs feature many of the same electronic systems as ICE vehicles, plus, of course, the drive train itself. According to Micron Technology, the electronics portion of an EV’s value is as much as 75%, with that portion increasing as advances in semiconductor technology continue to drive down the cost of various electronic modules and subsystems. Even nontraditional automotive players, such as Intel, are looking for a piece of the action.

Not surprisingly, of all the electronic subsystems in an EV, manufacturers and consumers alike focus on the heart of the EV, the battery system. The battery system includes the rechargeable battery itself, lithium-ion (Li-Ion) being the current standard, and the battery management system (BMS), which maximizes battery usage and safety by monitoring the battery.

BMS Monitoring

A BMS’s primary function is to monitor the state of a battery or, in the case of EVs, a very large pack or stack of batteries. A BMS typically monitors individual cell and pack voltages, currents, temperatures, state of charge (SOC), state of health (SOH), and other related functions, such as coolant flow. In addition to the obvious safety and performance benefits afforded by BMS, accurately monitoring these parameters generally translates to a better driving experience, where drivers are well-informed of real-time battery conditions.

To be effective, the BMS measurement circuits must be precise and fast, have high common-mode voltage rejection, consume low power, and securely communicate with other devices. Other EV BMS responsibilities include recovering energy back into the battery stack (that is, regenerative braking), balancing cells, protecting the battery stack from dangerous levels of voltage, current and temperature, and communicating with other subsystems (for example, chargers, loads, thermal management, and emergency shutdown).

Multiple BMS monitoring topologies are used by auto manufacturers to meet their need for accuracy, reliability, ease of manufacture, cost, and power requirements. For example, the distributed topology shown in Figure 1 emphasizes high accuracy with local smarts, high manufacturability with series-connected battery packs, and minimum power consumption and high reliability via low power SPI and isoSPI interfaces for inter-IC communications.

The topology in Figure 1 comprises an EV battery pack monitor (in this example, the LTC2949 from Analog Devices) used in a low-side current sensing configuration, where the isoSPI communication lines are parallel with the bottom battery monitor (the LTC6811-1). For enhanced reliability, a dual communication scheme can be realized by connecting a second isoSPI transceiver to the top of the battery stack and creating a ring topology that can communicate in both directions. Isolated communication with the SPI master controller is implemented via an LTC6820 isoSPI-to-SPI signal converter. Analog Devices’ stackable LTC681x family of multicell battery monitors can be used to measure individual voltages of up to 6, 12, 15, or 18 series-connected battery cells, while a single LTC2949 is used to measure total stack parameters. Together, the LTC681x and LTC2949 form a comprehensive EV BMS monitoring solution—for some, this circuitry might be better known as the BMS’s analog front end (AFE).

Figure 1. Distributed EV BMS monitoring topology using a battery monitor (LTC6811-1s) and an EV battery pack (LTC2949).

The EV battery pack monitor is a high precision current, voltage, temperature, charge, power, and energy meter specifically designed for EVs. By measuring these key parameters, system designers have the essentials to calculate real-time SOC and SOH, as well as other figures of merit, for the entire battery stack. Figure 2 shows a block diagram of the LTC2949 used in a high-side current sensing configuration. Here, the LTC2949 utilizes an adjustable floating topology, enabling it to monitor a very high voltage battery stack, unfettered by its own 14.5 V voltage rating. Power to the LTC2949 is supplied via an LT8301 isolated flyback converter with VCC connected to the positive battery terminal.

At the core of the EV battery pack monitor are rail-to-rail, low offset, sigma-delta (Σ-Δ) ADCs that ensure accurate voltage measurements. Of the five ADCs available in the LTC2949, two 20-bit ADCs are available to measure the voltages across two sense resistors (as shown in Figure 2) and infer the current flow through two separate rails with 0.3% accuracy; with less than 1 µV of offset, this provides high dynamic range. Similarly, the total battery stack voltage is measured with up to 18 bits and 0.4% accuracy. Two dedicated power ADCs sense the shunt and battery stack voltage inputs, yielding 0.9% accurate power readings. The last 15-bit ADC can be used to measure up to 12 auxiliary voltages—handy for use with external temperature sensors or resistive dividers. Using a built-in mux, the monitor can perform differential rail-to-rail voltage measurements between any pair of the 12 buffered inputs with 0.4% accuracy.

To simplify setup, the monitors five ADCs form three data acquisition channels. Each channel can be configured for one of two speeds, depending on the application, as shown in Table 1. For example, two channels can be used to monitor a single shunt resistor: one channel for slow (100 ms) high precision current, power, charge, and energy measurements; the other for fast (782 μs) snapshots of current, synchronized to battery stack voltage measurements for impedance tracking or precharge measurements. Alternatively, two different sized shunt resistors monitored by two separate channels (again, as shown in Figure 2) allow users to balance accuracy and power loss for each shunt. Meanwhile, the third auxiliary channel can take either fast measurements of selectable buffered inputs or auto-round-robin (RR) measurements of two configurable inputs, stack voltage, die temperature, supply voltage, and reference voltage.

Table 1. Configuration Options for the LTC2949’s Three Data Acquisition Channels

Since SOH is a point in the life cycle of a battery (or battery stack) and a measure of its condition relative to a fresh battery, it is important to use accurate EV BMS monitors to not only maximize driving range, but to minimize unexpected battery failures. Speaking of battery life, the LTC2949 consumes only 16 mA when turned on and only 8 µA when asleep.When any of the monitor’s three data acquisition channels are configured for fast mode (782 μs conversion time and 15-bit resolution), the monitor can synchronize its battery stack voltage and current measurements with cell voltage measurements from any LTC681x multicell battery monitor to infer individual cell impedance, age, and SOH. With this information, stack battery life can be assessed, since the weakest cell ultimately determines the SOH of the entire stack.

Digital Dominance

Digital capabilities for EV monitors include an oversampling multiplier and accumulators, producing 18-bit power values, and 48-bit energy and charge values—reporting minimums and maximums, as well as alerts based on user-defined limits. This unburdens the BMS controller and bus from the task of continuously polling the monitor for voltage and current data and the additional task of performing computations based on the results. By taking power samples at the oversample ADC clock rate (predecimation filter) instead of multiplying averaged values, the monitor accurately measures power in the presence of current and voltage variations far beyond its conversion rate, with signals up to 50 kHz.

Figure 2. Typical hookup of an LTC2949 floating EV battery monitor in high-side current sense configuration. Power for the monitor is supplied via the LT8301 flyback with VCC connected to the positive battery terminal.

Because the monitor tracks the minimum and maximum values of current, voltage, power, and temperature data, the bus and host can spend clock cycles on other tasks, instead of continuously polling the monitor. In addition to detecting and storing the minimum and maximum values, the monitor can issue an alert if any user-defined thresholds are exceeded—again, releasing the host controller and bus from polling duties. The monitor can also generate an overflow alert after a specified amount of energy or charge has been delivered, or when a preset amount of time has elapsed.

To ensure monitoring accuracy, the monitor provides programmable gain correction factors to compensate for the tolerances of measurement components: two for shunt resistors, a battery voltage divider, and four multiplexed inputs. These correction factors can be stored in external EEPROM to enable a modular approach to factory calibration of battery packs. The monitor can also linearize temperature readings of up to two external NTC thermistors by solving Steinhart-Hart equations with programmable coefficients; these readings can then be used to automatically temperature-compensate shunt resistor readings. By continuously compensating for both tolerance and temperature effects, not only is monitoring accuracy enhanced, but lower cost external components can be used.

A standard SPI interface can be used for direct MCU connection, and an isoSPI interface provides a physical layer adaptation of the standard chip-level SPI that unleashes the full potential of cost-effective distributed-pack architectures. Designed for high voltage and high noise systems, isoSPI provides safe and robust information transfer of up to 1 Mbps over up to 100 meters of cable, using only a single twisted pair cable and a simple pulse transformer. isoSPI is also less expensive than other on-board isolation solutions. Figure 3 shows how an architecture leveraging isoSPI as the last element in a daisy chain or in an addressable parallel configuration.

Figure 3. Architecture utilizing isoSPI configurations.

Conclusion

EVs have gone mainstream, leading to an inflection point of high-volume adoption. To stay competitive, system designers need to keep a close eye on both battery and BMS technologies, which profoundly affect the end-user experience. EV battery pack monitors simplify addressing multiple stack monitoring topologies and configurations. At practically any voltage and any current level, monitors enable high performance, safe, flexible, and reliable battery management systems. Accurate assessments of battery SOH and SOC are immediately available via accurate readings of current, voltage, power, energy, charge, temperature, and time. Key minimums, maximums, and alerts can be measured, calculated, and reported over an isoSPI interface. This reduces the requirement for host resources, bus design and testing, and software design. Some of the digital features include a multiplier, accumulator, min/max registers, configurable alerts, and external component tolerance/temperature compensation. Designed to work independently or with any multicell battery monitor, the monitors like the LTC2949 address a critical need for next-generation EV BMS while meeting strict AEC-Q100 guidelines and ISO 26262 safety standards.

About the Author

Christopher Gobok is a product marketing and operations manager for power systems management products at Analog Devices. Chris graduated from San Jose State University with a B.S.E.E., an M.S.E.E., and an MBA. His previous industry experience includes working as a PME with optoelectronics and power MOSFETs. He can be reached at [email protected].