The main functions of the battery management system
Share
The core function of a battery management system (BMS) is to extend battery life and ensure safe operation through intelligent management. It primarily includes key modules such as real-time monitoring of battery parameters, estimation of state of charge (SOC), balancing management, fault diagnosis and protection, thermal management, and communication.
Main Function Analysis
1. Real-time Parameter Monitoring
This system monitors core battery parameters such as cell voltage, current, and temperature, providing a data foundation for subsequent management.
High-precision sensors and ADC chips collect data to ensure measurement accuracy, for example, keeping the detection voltage error within ±5mV.
2. State of Charge (SOC) Estimation
This system uses closed-loop algorithms (such as Kalman filtering) to calculate the remaining battery charge in real time, typically with an error margin of less than 5%.
Combining current integration and open-circuit voltage methods, it dynamically corrects the SOC value to prevent capacity fading caused by overcharging/overdischarging.
3. Battery Balancing
Active balancing (energy transfer) or passive balancing (resistance energy dissipation) eliminates voltage differences between cells, reducing capacity differences to less than 2%.
Typical scenario: Automatically initiates balancing during fast charging of electric vehicles to ensure battery pack consistency.
4. Safety Protection and Fault Diagnosis.
Real-time detection of abnormal conditions such as overvoltage (>4.25V/cell), undervoltage (<2.8V/cell), and overtemperature (>60°C) triggers circuit breaker protection.
Builds a fault tree model to distinguish recoverable faults (such as short-term overcurrent) from permanent faults (such as internal short circuit).
5. Thermal Management System Control.
Liquid/air cooling maintains the battery pack temperature within the optimal range of 15-35°C, with a temperature differential within ±2°C.
Winter preheating allows the battery to maintain over 80% of its effective capacity at -20°C.
6. Data Exchange and Communication.
Supports CAN, RS485, Ethernet, and other protocols for real-time data exchange with the vehicle controller and charging station, with a transmission rate of up to 1Mbps.
Records historical operating data (such as cycle count and maximum depth of discharge), achieving over 90% lifetime prediction accuracy.
7. Expanded Applications
Energy Storage System Adaptation: In grid-level energy storage, the BMS can achieve millisecond-level response, collaborating with the EMS system to implement peak-shaving and valley-filling scheduling.
Layered Utilization Management: Through SOH (State of Health) assessments, retired batteries are selected for use in low-speed electric vehicles or backup power sources, increasing residual value utilization by 30%.