Publication Detail

Cloud-Based Deep Learning for Co-estimation of Battery State of Charge and State of Health

UCD-ITS-RP-23-95

Journal Article

Sustainable Transportation Energy Pathways (STEPS)

Suggested Citation:
Shi, Dapai, Jingyuan Zhao, Zhenghong Wang, Heng Zhao, Chika Eze, Junbin Wang, Yubo Lian, Andrew Burke (2023) Cloud-Based Deep Learning for Co-estimation of Battery State of Charge and State of Health. Energies

Rechargeable lithium-ion batteries are currently the most viable option for energy storage systems in electric vehicle (EV) applications due to their high specific energy, falling costs, and acceptable cycle life. However, accurately predicting the parameters of complex, nonlinear battery systems remains challenging, given diverse aging mechanisms, cell-to-cell variations, and dynamic operating conditions. The states and parameters of batteries are becoming increasingly important in ubiquitous application scenarios, yet our ability to predict cell performance under realistic conditions remains limited. To address the challenge of modelling and predicting the evolution of multiphysics and multiscale battery systems, this study proposes a cloud-based AI-enhanced framework. The framework aims to achieve practical success in the co-estimation of the state of charge (SOC) and state of health (SOH) during the system’s operational lifetime. Self-supervised transformer neural networks offer new opportunities to learn representations of observational data with multiple levels of abstraction and attention mechanisms. Coupling the cloud-edge computing framework with the versatility of deep learning can leverage the predictive ability of exploiting long-range spatio-temporal dependencies across multiple scales.

Key words: lithium-ion battery, state of charge, state of health, deep learning, cloud, field application