EV Battery Pack Cooling Design: Liquid vs Air vs Refrigerant — An Engineer’s Comparison

Battery thermal management is the difference between a pack that delivers 300 kW and one that throttles to 150 kW after 10 minutes of hard driving. For process engineers moving into pack design, understanding the trade-offs between cooling approaches is essential.

Why Cooling Matters

A lithium battery cell operates optimally at 25-35°C. Outside this range:

Temperature Effect
<0°C Lithium plating risk during charge, capacity loss 20-40%
0-15°C Reduced power, acceptable for discharge
25-35°C Optimal: best balance of power, life, and safety
40-50°C Accelerated aging (Arrhenius: ~2× degradation per 10°C)
>60°C SEI decomposition begins, thermal runaway risk escalates
>80°C Separator shutdown (polyethylene melts at 130°C, but damage starts earlier)

A 60 kWh pack generating 5% heat loss at 2C discharge produces 6 kW of heat. That’s equivalent to 2-3 household space heaters inside a sealed metal box. Without active cooling, the pack reaches 60°C within 15-20 minutes.

Cooling Technologies Compared

1. Air Cooling (Passive and Active)

How it works: Cabin air or dedicated air flow through pack, removing heat via convection.

Parameter Passive Air Active (Forced) Air
Heat removal capacity 0.5-1.5 kW 2-5 kW
Temperature uniformity ±5-8°C ±3-5°C
System weight Minimal 5-15 kg (fans, ducts)
Cost Very low Low ($50-150)
Best for Low-power, short-range (Nissan Leaf gen 1) Moderate power (older PHEVs)
Not suitable for Fast charging (>1C), high ambient temp >2C continuous discharge

The problem with air: air’s specific heat capacity is 1.0 kJ/kg·K vs. 3.5 kJ/kg·K for water-glycol. You need 3.5× more air mass flow for the same heat removal. At high power levels, the fans become loud and power-hungry.

2. Liquid Cooling (Indirect)

How it works: Water-glycol (50:50) circulated through cold plates in contact with cell/module surfaces.

Parameter Bottom Plate Side Plate (Inter-cell)
Heat removal capacity 5-15 kW 10-25 kW
Temperature uniformity ±1-3°C ±0.5-2°C
Pressure drop 5-15 kPa 10-30 kPa
Leak risk Low (external to module) Medium (between cells)
Manufacturing complexity Low High (requires precision assembly)
Used by Most current EVs Porsche Taycan, some Lucid designs

The state of the art (2026):

  • CATL’s CTP 3.0 (Cell-to-Pack): bottom plate cooling, cells bonded directly to cooling plate with thermal interface material (TIM)
  • BYD Blade: prismatic LFP cells with edge cooling — cooling plate contacts the large face of each cell
  • Tesla 4680 structural pack: cells bonded to cooling tubes with structural adhesive that also serves as TIM

Key design parameters for liquid cooling:


Coolant: 50:50 water-ethylene glycol
Flow rate: 5-15 L/min per module (8-16 kWh)
Supply temperature: 15-25°C (chiller or radiator-dependent)
ΔT across pack: <5°C (inlet to outlet)
Max cell temperature: <45°C (normal operation), <55°C (fast charge)
Cell-to-cell ΔT: <5°C (aging uniformity), <3°C (premium)
`

3. Refrigerant (Direct) Cooling

How it works: A/C refrigerant (R-1234yf or R-744 CO₂) evaporates in cold plates directly contacting cells.

Parameter Value
Heat removal capacity 15-40 kW
Temperature uniformity ±0.5-2°C
Minimum achievable temperature -10°C (for pre-cooling before fast charge)
System complexity High (requires integration with vehicle A/C)
Cost High ($300-800)
COP (at 35°C ambient) 2.0-3.5
Used by Mercedes EQS, BMW iX (partially), some Chinese premium EVs

When refrigerant cooling makes sense:

  • Sustained high-power operation (track driving, towing)
  • Ultra-fast charging (>350 kW, 800V architecture)
  • Very high ambient temperatures (Middle East, Australian outback)
  • When pack energy density is so high that liquid cooling can't keep up

The trade-off: refrigerant cooling can pull more heat, but it's a two-phase system with compression, expansion, and phase change. It's inherently more complex, more expensive, and has more failure modes than a simple liquid loop.

4. Immersion Cooling

How it works: Cells submerged in dielectric fluid (fluorinated hydrocarbon or ester-based) that directly contacts cell surfaces.

Parameter Value
Heat removal capacity 20-50+ kW
Temperature uniformity ±0.5-1°C (best of all methods)
Fire suppression Inherent (fluid is non-flammable, excludes oxygen)
Weight penalty +15-30 kg (fluid weight)
Cost High ($500-1,500 per pack)
Maintenance Sealed system, but fluid degrades over 8-10 years
Best for Ultra-high-performance, aviation, military

Immersion cooling was hyped heavily in 2022-2024 but has seen limited commercial adoption in automotive. The weight and cost premiums are hard to justify when liquid cold plates already achieve adequate thermal performance for 95% of use cases.

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Thermal Interface Materials: The Silent Performance Killer

The biggest thermal bottleneck in most packs isn't the cooling system — it's the interface between the cell and the cold plate.

TIM Type Thermal Conductivity (W/m·K) Bond Line Thickness Cost
Gap filler pad (silicone) 1-5 0.5-2 mm Low
Gap filler (dispensed, cured) 2-8 0.2-1 mm Medium
Thermal adhesive (epoxy) 1-3 0.1-0.3 mm Low (structural)
Thermal grease 3-10 0.05-0.1 mm Low (but pumps out over time)
Phase change material (PCM) 3-8 (when liquid) 0.05-0.15 mm Medium

The TIM rule: thermal resistance = bond line thickness / (thermal conductivity × area). A 1 mm gap pad at 3 W/m·K has the same resistance as a 0.1 mm grease layer at 9 W/m·K. The grease is 10× thinner but only 3× more conductive — yet because the relationship is linear with thickness, thinness wins.

Practical recommendation: specify bond line thickness, not just TIM conductivity. A "high-performance" 6 W/m·K gap pad at 1.5 mm thickness performs worse than a "standard" 3 W/m·K grease at 0.1 mm.

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System Architecture Options

Option A: Passive (Radiator Only)

`
Pack → Cold Plate → Pump → Radiator (ambient air) → Back to Pack
`

  • Works when ambient <35°C and power <2C
  • Simplest, cheapest, most reliable
  • Cannot cool below ambient — limited in hot climates

Option B: Active (Chiller)

`
Pack → Cold Plate → Pump → Chiller (refrigerant-to-coolant HX) → Back to Pack

A/C Compressor → Condenser → Expansion Valve → Chiller
`

  • Can cool pack to 15-20°C even at 45°C ambient
  • Uses vehicle A/C system — adds 1-3 kW compressor load
  • Necessary for fast charging in hot climates

Option C: Heat Pump Integration

`
Pack (waste heat) → Heat Pump (reversible) → Cabin Heating
→ Battery Heating (cold start)
→ Battery Cooling (hot operation)

  • Most efficient overall system
  • Recovers pack waste heat for cabin heating in winter (extends range 10-20%)
  • Used by Tesla (Octovalve), VW MEB platform, Hyundai E-GMP

Design Checklist

Before finalizing a pack cooling design:

  • [ ] Define worst-case heat generation (max ambient + max continuous discharge + max charge rate)
  • [ ] Select cooling technology based on heat flux (W/cm²), not total heat load
  • [ ] Specify TIM bond line thickness and verify with assembly process capability
  • [ ] Design for uniform flow distribution — CFD analysis of cold plate channels
  • [ ] Include a heater for cold-start charging (PTC or heat pump)
  • [ ] Pressure test cold plate assembly to 2× operating pressure
  • [ ] Include coolant leak detection (conductivity sensor in pack)
  • [ ] Verify thermal runaway propagation resistance with cooling system active and inactive

Battery cooling isn’t just about removing heat — it’s about removing it uniformly, reliably, and with minimum parasitic power. The best cooling system is the one you don’t notice because the battery just works, at any temperature, at any charge rate, for 15 years.


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