A Review of Thermal Safety and Management of Second-Life Batteries: Cell Screening, Pack Configuration and Health Estimation
Abstrak
Electric vehicle (EV) adoption is generating a rapidly increasing stream of retired lithium-ion batteries for second-life deployment. However, thermal safety concerns continue to limit their reuse. This paper reviews second-life battery (SLB) thermal safety and management and organizes existing work through a mechanism-to-deployment framework linking four domains: degradation mechanisms, cell screening, pack configuration, and monitoring. Evidence indicates that thermal risk depends on the degradation pathway rather than capacity fade. In fact, cells with comparable capacity can exhibit substantially different trigger temperatures depending on whether lithium plating or solid-electrolyte interphase (SEI) growth dominates. Therefore, capacity-based screening is insufficient because cells that satisfy capacity thresholds may still remain thermally unstable. The four domains are tightly coupled: the degradation pathway determines screening requirements; screening outcomes constrain pack design; pack topology influences fault escalation; and together these factors determine what monitoring can reliably detect. This review highlights three gaps and outlines future research directions in the field of SLB thermal safety and management: limited aged-cell thermal characterization by degradation pathway, insufficient diagnostic validation under industrial-throughput conditions, and the incomplete translation of screening outputs into design rules.
Topik & Kata Kunci
Penulis (4)
Md Imran Hasan
Gang Lei
Dylan Lu
Pablo Poblete Durruty
Akses Cepat
- Tahun Terbit
- 2026
- Sumber Database
- DOAJ
- DOI
- 10.3390/batteries12030099
- Akses
- Open Access ✓