Abstract
Implantable cardioverter-defibrillators place stringent demands on the lithium/silver vanadium oxide batteries that power them. The batteries run constantly at low power and then occasionally deliver one or more high-power pulses. The ability of lithium/silver vanadium oxide batteries to deliver high-power pulses was characterized over a wide range of conditions. The power was mapped as a function of current density, pulse duration, and depth of discharge. This work defines the conditions under which the batteries can operate at high power; if current density and pulse duration are too high, concentration polarization predominates, especially at high depths of discharge. A time- and temperature-dependent increase in battery resistance was observed starting at a cathode composition of Li 2.8 Ag 2 V 4 O 11 . The added resistance appears mostly on the cathode, and grows at an approximately twofold faster rate when the cathode is synthesized from a decomposition process rather than a combination process. A model was developed to predict discharge behavior of a wide variety of battery designs. This model incorporates time- and temperature-dependent resistance increase using first-order kinetics. The model predicts the behavior of new battery designs very accurately for an application up to five years, but slightly underestimates performance at seven years. © 2000 The Electrochemical Society. All rights reserved.
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CITATION STYLE
Crespi, A., Schmidt, C., Norton, J., Chen, K., & Skarstad, P. (2001). Modeling and Characterization of the Resistance of Lithium/SVO Batteries for Implantable Cardioverter Defibrillators. Journal of The Electrochemical Society, 148(1), A30. https://doi.org/10.1149/1.1342156
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