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Battery Manufacturing Terminology
One or more individual battery cells assembled with necessary components such as casing, terminals, labels, and protective devices.
A battery that utilizes lithium ions as conductive ions, moving between the positive and negative electrodes, to achieve the conversion of chemical energy into electrical energy during charging and vice versa during discharging. This category includes both individual lithium-ion cells and lithium-ion battery packs.
The fundamental unit of a lithium-ion battery, consisting of electrodes, a separator, a casing, and insulating protective components within an electrolyte environment.
A lithium-ion battery that contains only liquid electrolyte.
A liquid lithium-ion battery with a non-aqueous organic solvent as the electrolyte.
A liquid lithium-ion battery with an aqueous solvent as the electrolyte.
A lithium-ion battery that contains both liquid and solid electrolytes.
A lithium-ion battery cell that contains only solid-state electrolyte and does not contain any liquid electrolyte, liquid solvents, or liquid additives.
Translation: A lithium-ion battery in which the liquid electrolyte forms a gel-like state with a polymer high-molecular-weight material.
A lithium-ion battery in which one side of the electrode does not contain liquid electrolyte, while the other side of the electrode contains liquid electrolyte. Alternatively, a lithium-ion battery in which the mass or volume of solid electrolyte in an individual cell constitutes half of the total mass or total volume of electrolyte in the individual cell.
Lithium batteries that use plastic film as the outer casing.
In the manufacturing process of lithium-ion batteries, the positive electrode sheet, negative electrode sheet, and separator are stacked or wound together alternately. After being fixed with termination tape at the end, they form the basic unit known as a winding core.
"Anode typically refers to the electrode where oxidation reactions occur.Note: The anode is the negative electrode during discharge and the positive electrode during charging."
Cathode typically refers to the electrode where reduction reactions occur.Note: The cathode is the positive electrode during discharge and the negative electrode during charging.
"An electrode made by adhering a certain proportion of active material and conductive additives to a current collector through a binder, and then fabricated through a specific process.Note: The current collector for the electrode sheet can be in the form of metal foil, mesh, and so on."
Typically, it refers to the electrode sheet containing active materials that undergo oxidation reactions during discharge, and it has a relatively lower electrical potential.