Setting Cell Data Overrides

You cannot override any settings for battery cells that were created with the current version of Simcenter Battery Design Studio. The ability to override the cell capacity or state of charge settings for a battery cell is available only for cells that use the legacy NTG model. This model was available with earlier versions of Simcenter Battery Design Studio, but is not supported in the current version of Simcenter Battery Design Studio.

Note

This procedure applies only to battery cells that use the legacy NTG model. If you want to change cell data for any other model, you need to make the changes in Simcenter Battery Design Studio and re-import the cell into Simcenter STAR-CCM+.

If you change the cell capacity or state of charge settings during a simulation, the new values do not take effect immediately. To apply the new values to the simulation, you must clear the solution.

When you load a simulation into Simcenter STAR-CCM+, the restored simulation uses the cell capacity or state of charge settings that were in effect when the simulation was saved. However, if you clear the solution, any override settings are lost: the simulation reads the cell capacity and state of charge settings from the original .tbm file. If you want to use the same values again, you must re-enter the appropriate cell capacity or state of charge override settings.

To override the cell capacity or state of charge settings:

  1. Under the appropriate battery cell node, expand the Cell Properties > Models > IET > [Model Name] > Base Model > Override Cell Data node.


  2. Select the Capacity node or the Initial SOC node.
  3. Set the Cell Data Override Option property to Override.

    The corresponding node is added. The example below shows setting the override for the Initial SOC node.



  4. Select the Capacity or SOC node and set the corresponding override property:
    • Value (for Capacity): Set the cell capacity in Ah or coulombs.

    • Percentage (for SOC): Set the cell state of charge as a percentage of its capacity.

    NoteWhen you run a simulation, if the battery cell state of charge reaches 0% or 100%, the state of charge of the cell becomes fixed at that value. The simulation continues to run, but uses the constant value that the model computes at the fixed state of charge. Obviously, a real battery cell does not behave in this way.