30
© Copyright 2010 by Philadelphia Scientific LLC Lead Purity: The Mother of all VRLA Problems Harold Vanasse Dan Jones Will Jones

© Copyright 2010 by Philadelphia Scientific LLC Lead Purity: The Mother of all VRLA Problems Harold Vanasse Dan Jones Will Jones

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

© Copyright 2010 by Philadelphia Scientific LLC

Lead Purity: The Mother of all VRLA Problems

Harold VanasseDan JonesWill Jones

© Copyright 2010 by Philadelphia Scientific LLC

Presentation Outline

• Lead purity makes a difference

• Lead purity and battery life

• Measuring lead purity

• Solutions for managing lead purity

• Conclusion

© Copyright 2010 by Philadelphia Scientific LLC

Why Lead Purity is Important

• In the early 1980’s a European battery company made the 1st VRLA starter battery for cars.

• Imagine – no more watering of car batteries!– This was a wildly anticipated product.

• The first European built prototypes worked great. – Tests were conducted in the hot southern USA.

• USA factory was built to produce these batteries. – The same European specification and tooling was

used.

© Copyright 2010 by Philadelphia Scientific LLC

What Happened?

• Catastrophe!

• Many batteries were produced and they failed all over the country.

• The financial losses were in the millions!

• The factory was closed.

• The resulting investigation could not determine the cause of the failure.

© Copyright 2010 by Philadelphia Scientific LLC

The Rest of the Story

• 20 years later the cause was determined. • It all had to do with the purity of the lead. • The prototype batteries used lead from Europe. • The production batteries used lead from US.• Both Euro and US lead was in spec.

– But not in the same place within the spec.

• But how could this happen when spectrometry was used to measure the lead purity?– Maybe they are not the right tool to use?

© Copyright 2010 by Philadelphia Scientific LLC

Lead Purity and Battery Life

© Copyright 2010 by Philadelphia Scientific LLC

Time for Some Science

• There is a direct and scientific link between battery life and lead purity.

• There is a delicate voltage balance within a VRLA cell. – Voltage is shared between positive and negative plates.

• Too many impurities in negative active material throw off the balance leading to: – Excessive gassing– Increased current draw– Short life

© Copyright 2010 by Philadelphia Scientific LLC

Voltage Evenly Split

• This is the ideal – it is what we want!

• Reactions are in balance.• Unfortunately it is not

what is typical for VRLA.

Negative Plate Voltage

Positive Plate Voltage

© Copyright 2010 by Philadelphia Scientific LLC

Voltage All on Positive Plate

• Typical VRLA problem• Negative plate discharges

while on float charge.• Leads to:

– Increased gassing– Capacity loss– Increased float current & cell

temperature – Cell dryout– Corrosion of positive plate – Early failure.

Negative Plate Voltage

Positive Plate Voltage

© Copyright 2010 by Philadelphia Scientific LLC

VRLA on Float Charge

• Oxygen is produced on positive plate and recombined with hydrogen on negative plate. – This pulls down voltage of negative plate

• Impurities cause greater gassing on negative plate.– Lead + Acid + Impurities = Hydrogen Gas

• If the rate of gassing is too high the see saw shifts off balance leading to cell failure.– Negative plate self discharges.

© Copyright 2010 by Philadelphia Scientific LLC

Key Points to Remember

• There are multiple reactions to keep in balance within VRLA cells.

• Impurities in the lead drive the self discharge of the negative active material.

• If there was a way to prevent the gas from depolarizing the negative plate then lead purity would not matter so much.

© Copyright 2010 by Philadelphia Scientific LLC

Measuring Lead Purity

© Copyright 2010 by Philadelphia Scientific LLC

Mass SpectrometryUsed to measure purity

• A computerized detector counts where ions are in the e/m spectrum. – Location on the

spectrum identifies the element.

– Count of ions determines purity.

© Copyright 2010 by Philadelphia Scientific LLC

Mass Spectrometry

• Spectrometry is used to measure the amount of individual impurities.

• Each individual impurity has a specification that limits maximum amount allowed.

• Sum total of impurities or net effect is not addressed.

• Not all impurities are created equal!

© Copyright 2010 by Philadelphia Scientific LLC

Culpin’s Clever Contraption

• Measures self discharge based on gassing rate.– More impurities = more gas

• Charge a single negative plate.

• Put it under acid in a graduated beaker.

• Collect evolved gas.

© Copyright 2010 by Philadelphia Scientific LLC

What is Good About It?

• It is better than mass spectrometry because it measures the combined effect all of the impurities.

• It is the net effect of all the impurities that we are ultimately concerned about.

• We ran this test for VRLA cells from multiple manufactures.

© Copyright 2010 by Philadelphia Scientific LLC

What we found

0

200

400

600

800

1000

1200

1400

1600

1800

2000

0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35

Elapsed Time (Days)

Hy

dro

ge

n e

vo

lve

d i

n m

l/1

00

Ah

at

90

°F (

32

°C)

FA

IL P

AS

S

5

© Copyright 2010 by Philadelphia Scientific LLC

Lessons from the Test

• Worst battery produced 10 times more gas than best battery.

• All batteries claimed to use “pure” lead.

• There is large variability in the purity of the lead used.

• Disparities in test are what we see in real world performance of VRLA cells.

© Copyright 2010 by Philadelphia Scientific LLC

The Bottom Line

• Controlling total amount of impurities is the key to VRLA performance.

• A mass spectrometer may not give the full picture for measuring VRLA lead purity.

• Lead purity is not being managed adequately for VRLA batteries.

© Copyright 2010 by Philadelphia Scientific LLC

Solutions

for

Managing Lead Purity

© Copyright 2010 by Philadelphia Scientific LLC

What Can Be Done?

• Three options exist: – Use very pure primary lead.– Use super refined secondary lead.– Use a catalyst

• None of these solutions are new.

© Copyright 2010 by Philadelphia Scientific LLC

History

• Mid 1990’s: VRLA problems abound.

• Will Jones and Dr. Dave Feder repeatedly show that VRLA batteries won’t deliver design life.

• Various solutions presented to correct the problems.

• Root cause always the same: Lead purity not exact enough for VRLA.

© Copyright 2010 by Philadelphia Scientific LLC

Use Very Pure Primary Lead

• Primary lead comes directly from mines.

• Worldwide demand is increasing.

• It is getting harder to obtain.

• It is becoming more expensive. – The greater the purity

the greater the price.

• May not be sustainable.

© Copyright 2010 by Philadelphia Scientific LLC

Use Super Refined Secondary Lead

• Secondary lead has been used before and then recycled.

• Refining to a higher purity standard is a must for VRLA.

• The very things that we need to add to other battery types are poisons to VRLA. – E.g. Silver from automotive

batteries.

© Copyright 2010 by Philadelphia Scientific LLC

Use Super Refined Secondary Lead

• Impurities from lead recycling stream are expensive to remove.– The greater the purity the greater the price.

• More exact purity standards and testing are needed to ensure a practical purity level is constantly maintained.

• Concern: How do you know which battery is made with good lead and which manufacturer cuts cost and quality?

© Copyright 2010 by Philadelphia Scientific LLC

Use a Catalyst

• A catalyst will recombine hydrogen & oxygen to make water in the cell.

• It prevents gas from depolarizing the negative plate so that it does not self discharge.

• Cell stays in balance – See saw is in the good middle position.

• Compensates for fluctuations and variations in lead purity.

• May be the most cost effective.

© Copyright 2010 by Philadelphia Scientific LLC

Will’s Experiments

• Early experimentation showed that VRLA cells gassed too much.

• Oxygen and Hydrogen leaving cell had to be reduced to obtain long life.

• A catalyst reduced gassing to good levels.

• Proof that this problem could be solved.

0

25

50

75

100

125

150

ml/d

ay/1

00 A

.h.

20 year life

10 year

5 year life

3 year life

Catalyst Cells Standard Cells

© Copyright 2010 by Philadelphia Scientific LLC

Conclusion

© Copyright 2010 by Philadelphia Scientific LLC

The Mother of all Problems

• Managing lead purity is the main problem with VRLA cells today.

• Most of the other problems have already been solved.

• Until this problem is solved VRLA cells will not live up to their design life.

• The sad part is that the information is not new. • It is all about lead purity!

© Copyright 2010 by Philadelphia Scientific LLC

Which is the best solution?

• The solutions are: – Primary lead– Super refined secondary lead– Catalyst

• All three solutions will increase cost of the battery but the longer life will justify it.

• Battery buyers/users must specify what they want! – Battery companies build what users specify.