Development of Lightweight, Sustainable and Multifunctional Battery Pack Materials in Electric Vehicles
| dc.contributor.author | Soragaon, Jayanth | |
| dc.contributor.department | Chalmers tekniska högskola / Institutionen för industri- och materialvetenskap | sv |
| dc.contributor.department | Chalmers University of Technology / Department of Industrial and Materials Science | en |
| dc.contributor.examiner | Sun, Jinhua | |
| dc.contributor.supervisor | Sun, Jinhua | |
| dc.date.accessioned | 2025-10-29T10:12:09Z | |
| dc.date.issued | 2025 | |
| dc.date.submitted | ||
| dc.description.abstract | Accelerated needs for battery electric vehicles (BEVs) drive materials requirements toward lightweight, mechanically stable, and environmentally friendly battery packaging materials beyond metal-rich systems. This thesis explores the GO/rGO polymer coatings as multifunctional layers for two packaging sectors, namely, CF skins for battery enclosure and PA/PE films for pouch laminates. A focused literature benchmark is supplemented with experiments performed on coated CF and PA/PE coupons at 1, 3, and 5 wt% graphene loadings. Performance was characterized via peel load–displacement (interfacial adhesion and failure mode), tensile testing (mechanical integrity of coated substrates) and a 48 h deionized-water soak (moisture stability). Results demonstrate that low-to-moderate loadings (1-3 wt%) provide robust adhesion and mechanical performance on both CF and PA/PE, whilst coatings remain stable after soaking. On the other hand, 5 wt% early debonded, synergetic particulate detachment and worse mechanical behavior, indicating interfacial instability. Such results bring valuable design guidelines to metal-lean/metal-free battery packaging: constraining graphene in a 1–3 wt% window and adopting graded coatings (less loading on adhesion-critical interfaces, moderate loading on reinforcing or tortuosity-barrier sites). This route enables lightweight CF enclosures and metal-free pouch laminates, which are in line with the sustainability targets. The leading nextstep priorities are quantitative WVTR/OTR, electrolyte ageing and thermal/abuse propagation studies, as well as life-cycle analysis (LCA) and scalability considerations. | |
| dc.identifier.coursecode | IMSX30 | |
| dc.identifier.uri | http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12380/310692 | |
| dc.language.iso | eng | |
| dc.setspec.uppsok | Technology | |
| dc.subject | graphene oxide (GO) | |
| dc.subject | reduced graphene oxide (rGO) | |
| dc.subject | carbon fiber (CF) | |
| dc.subject | polyamide (PA) | |
| dc.subject | polyethylene (PE) | |
| dc.subject | water vapour transmission rate (WVTR) | |
| dc.subject | oxygen transmission rate (OTR) | |
| dc.subject | battery electric vehicle (BEV) | |
| dc.subject | tensile testing | |
| dc.subject | peel adhesion | |
| dc.subject | pouch cell laminate | |
| dc.title | Development of Lightweight, Sustainable and Multifunctional Battery Pack Materials in Electric Vehicles | |
| dc.type.degree | Examensarbete för masterexamen | sv |
| dc.type.degree | Master's Thesis | en |
| dc.type.uppsok | H | |
| local.programme | Mobility engineering (MPMOB), MSc |
