A lithium-iron-phosphate battery refers to a battery using lithium iron phosphate as a positive electrode material, which has the following advantages and characteristics. The requirements for battery assembly are also stricter and need to be completed under low-humidity conditions.
Like any other battery, Lithium Iron Phosphate (LiFePO4) battery is made of power-generating electrochemical cells to power electrical devices. As shown in Figure 1, the LiFePO4 battery consists of an anode, cathode, separator, electrolyte, and positive and negative current collectors.
Despite its numerous advantages, lithium iron phosphate faces challenges that need to be addressed for wider adoption: Energy Density: LFP batteries have a lower energy density compared to NCM or NCA batteries, which limits their use in applications requiring high energy storage in a compact form.
Li, Fe, PO4 are important components of lithium iron phosphate batteries, which are widely used in electric vehicles and renewable ESS.
The most notable difference between lithium iron phosphate and lead acid is the fact that the lithium battery capacity shows only a small dependence on the discharge rate. With very high discharge rates, for instance 0.8C, the capacity of the lead acid battery is only 60% of the rated capacity.
Negative electrodes (anode, on discharge) made of petroleum coke were used in early lithium-ion batteries; later types used natural or synthetic graphite. Multiple lithium iron phosphate modules are wired in series and parallel to create a 2800 Ah 52 V battery module. Total battery capacity is 145.6 kWh.