Ultrasonic welding for lithium-ion battery connections

Lithium-ion batteries power everything from smartphones to electric vehicles, and their performance depends heavily on how cells are connected. Each connection must be electrically conductive, mechanically strong, and reliable under heat, vibration, and repeated charge cycles. Ultrasonic welding has emerged as the most effective solution, enabling safe and efficient connections without damaging sensitive cells.

Why secure connections matter in lithium-ion batteries

In a lithium-ion battery pack, thousands of cells are connected in series and parallel using tabs and busbars. These links must carry high currents while maintaining low resistance to avoid overheating and energy loss. Traditional welding techniques such as resistance or laser welding introduce thermal stress, which can compromise safety and shorten battery life. Ultrasonic welding overcomes these issues by creating solid-state joints with minimal heat input.

By bonding metals through vibration and pressure, ultrasonic welding ensures durability, conductivity, and repeatability. This is why leading manufacturers of EVs, stationary storage, and consumer electronics have adopted it as their preferred joining method.

How ultrasonic welding creates battery connections

Ultrasonic welding is fundamentally different from fusion welding because it does not melt metals. Instead, it creates solid-state bonds using high-frequency mechanical vibrations and a controlled force.

The principle of vibration-assisted metallic bonding

The process begins with an ultrasonic generator that produces high-frequency electrical energy, typically between 20 and 40 kHz. A transducer converts this energy into mechanical vibrations, which are amplified by a booster and delivered through a sonotrode (welding horn) to the cell tab and busbar. Under applied pressure, these vibrations scrub the metal surfaces at the microscopic level, breaking oxide layers and allowing atomic bonds to form.

Why minimal heat protects battery cells

Unlike arc or laser welding, ultrasonic welding does not melt metals. The localized heating produced by friction is only enough to enable diffusion at the surface, leaving the bulk of the materials unchanged. This protects delicate battery components such as separators, electrolytes, and polymer casings, preventing thermal runaway and preserving long-term safety.

The importance of force and displacement control

The actuator applies a defined force that compresses the metals together while vibrations occur. Displacement sensors measure how much the stack compresses, providing real-time quality feedback. This combination of force, vibration, and monitoring ensures repeatable results and helps detect defective welds before they enter the supply chain.

Advantages of ultrasonic welding in lithium-ion batteries

Ultrasonic welding has become the gold standard for lithium-ion battery connections thanks to its balance of electrical, mechanical, and economic benefits.

Low resistance and high conductivity for efficient power

Solid-state ultrasonic welds create metallic joints with minimal electrical resistance. This ensures efficient current flow across cells and busbars, reducing heat generation and maximizing energy output—an essential feature for electric vehicles and high-power storage systems.

No thermal damage to sensitive cells

Because the process generates minimal heat, ultrasonic welding avoids damaging battery electrolytes, separators, and coatings. This is particularly important in pouch cells and cylindrical cells, where localized overheating could trigger safety issues.

Strong and vibration-resistant joints

Connections must withstand years of cycling, road vibration, and thermal expansion. Ultrasonic welds are mechanically robust and resist fatigue, ensuring long service life even under harsh automotive conditions.

Rapid cycle times for high-volume production

Ultrasonic welding is extremely fast, with cycle times typically under one second. This makes it ideal for mass production environments, where thousands of cells must be connected daily with high repeatability.

Compatibility with dissimilar metals

Modern lithium-ion batteries often combine copper, aluminum, and nickel for optimal performance and cost. Ultrasonic welding can join these dissimilar metals effectively, overcoming challenges that other welding methods face.

Environmentally clean and sustainable process

The process requires no filler metals, flux, or adhesives, which reduces material costs and eliminates chemical residues. Welded assemblies are easier to recycle, contributing to the circular economy of batteries.

Industrial applications of ultrasonic battery welding

Ultrasonic welding of lithium-ion connections is now standard across several industries where high-performance batteries are essential.

Electric vehicles and large mobility platforms

EVs depend on thousands of precise connections between cells and busbars. Ultrasonic welding ensures low-resistance, reliable joints that maintain safety and performance over years of operation. Automakers including Tesla, Volkswagen, and GM integrate ultrasonic welding into their pack assembly lines.

Hybrid vehicles and plug-in hybrids

In hybrid systems, frequent charging and discharging cycles place extra stress on connections. Ultrasonic welding creates robust joints that resist fatigue, making it ideal for these demanding applications.

Stationary energy storage systems

Energy storage modules for grid stabilization and renewable integration require reliable long-term performance. Ultrasonic welding produces durable joints that can withstand decades of cycling in harsh environments.

Consumer electronics and portable devices

Laptops, power tools, and smartphones use lithium-ion batteries with miniature connections. Ultrasonic welding provides precise, low-heat joints that protect delicate electronics while ensuring consistent power delivery.

Equipment and materials powering ultrasonic battery welding

Behind every reliable ultrasonic weld is a carefully engineered system where electronic, mechanical, and monitoring components work together. In the context of lithium-ion batteries, the equipment must handle delicate materials while ensuring speed, consistency, and safety in mass production. Each element of the setup plays a unique role in converting energy, applying force, and guaranteeing that every weld meets the stringent standards of the automotive and electronics industries.

  • The ultrasonic generator transforms electrical energy from the grid into high-frequency signals, usually between 20 and 40 kHz. Modern digital generators not only stabilize frequency but also adapt automatically to minor variations during the weld, which ensures consistent energy delivery. Many are integrated with data logging features, making it possible to track quality metrics and comply with industry traceability requirements.
  • The transducer transducer converts the generator’s electrical signals into mechanical vibrations, while the booster adjusts the amplitude to the level required for the specific application. This combination ensures that the vibrations reaching the welding horn are powerful enough to scrub oxide layers and create strong metallic bonds, even in challenging materials like copper or laminated foils.
  • Also known as the sonotrode, the welding horn is the contact tool that delivers vibrations into the busbar and tab. Its shape and surface finish are designed to distribute energy evenly across the weld area, preventing weak spots or material damage. For lithium-ion applications, horns are often made of titanium to resist stress and wear during high-volume production.
  • The actuator positions the horn and applies controlled pressure to the materials being welded. Servo-electric actuators are frequently used because they provide precise control over displacement and force. This accuracy is key when welding delicate battery components, as even small variations in pressure can affect joint quality and long-term performance.
  • Advanced ultrasonic welding machines are equipped with sensors that track displacement, energy input, force, and time during each weld. These parameters are analyzed in real time to detect deviations and prevent defective joints from proceeding to assembly. The recorded data also serves as proof of compliance in industries such as automotive, where safety standards are exceptionally strict.

In addition to the equipment itself, the choice of conductive materials and joint designs plays a decisive role in welding performance. Each material brings its own characteristics, and ultrasonic welding adapts to meet these requirements.

  • Copper is widely used because of its excellent conductivity, and while ultrasonic welding bonds copper busbars to tabs reliably, the material’s stiffness requires higher energy levels, especially in high-current EV battery modules.
  • Aluminum is valued for being lightweight and affordable, and ultrasonic welding is particularly effective at breaking through its oxide layer, allowing the creation of strong and conductive joints even in multi-layer foil stacks.
  • Nickel-plated steel is often employed in cylindrical cell terminals, and ultrasonic welding ensures durable joints without damaging protective coatings, preserving both conductivity and resistance to corrosion.
  • Laminated foils and multi-layer busbars are common in advanced battery designs, and ultrasonic welding can bond several layers in one operation, reducing tooling complexity while maintaining high efficiency.

Design guidelines for lithium-ion battery connections

Achieving reliable ultrasonic welds requires more than simply using the right equipment. The design of the joints, the preparation of materials, and the definition of process parameters all have a direct impact on weld strength and repeatability. By following well-structured design guidelines, manufacturers can ensure that connections meet performance standards while remaining scalable for mass production.

  • Preparing surfaces for welding helps improve bonding efficiency because contaminants, oils, or dust can interfere with the scrubbing action of ultrasonic vibrations. Proper handling and storage of tabs and busbars minimize risks of contamination and lead to more consistent welds.
  • Shaping joints to optimize geometry ensures that energy is distributed evenly across the weld area, which prevents weak points and reduces electrical resistance. Flat surfaces and carefully defined contact zones allow the vibrations to concentrate where bonding is needed most.
  • Controlling process parameters with precision makes it possible to achieve repeatable results even in high-volume production. Adjusting amplitude, pressure, and weld time for each material combination creates a stable process window that reduces defects and ensures quality.
  • Testing and validating welds through mechanical and electrical measurements confirms that connections meet compliance and safety standards. Pull tests, shear tests, and resistance checks are commonly used to verify joint strength before production scales up.

Mecasonic expertise in ultrasonic welding for lithium-ion battery connection

Tabs and busbars require cold joints, low resistance, and full traceability. Mecasonic treats the welding cell as a unified system in which press motion, ultrasonic power, tooling, and sequencing operate in concert for ultrasonic welding. Programs travel with the hardware, keeping operating logic consistent from pilot runs to EV-scale production for lithium-ion battery modules connection.

The battery team bridges lab work and production reality. Weld windows are established on copper, aluminum, and laminated foils. Coatings are preserved, joint resistance is verified on coupons and sub-modules, and audit-ready recipes are delivered. Training and service maintain stable behavior as designs and suppliers change.

The press platform defines stroke, force, and hold. Recipe recall keeps performance steady across shifts and module variants. Selection within the range depends on the cell architecture and governance needs:

  • Omega 4 A+ handles routine tab-to-busbar joints with simple setup and calm, repeatable motion;
  • Omega 4 S introduces adaptive modes that maintain collapse and force targets on thin or multi-layer stacks;
  • Omega 4 X adds deep programmability and plant connectivity for governed recipes and end-to-end traceability;
  • Omega 4 E delivers quiet, precise servo-electric travel near live cells.

Power delivery and orchestration keep vibration and motion synchronized. A single control vocabulary supports consistent deployment across stations:

  • Pulse Touch provides touchscreen setup, rapid recipe changes, automatic resonance tracking, and shaped amplitude profiles;
  • Pulse One fits compact cabinets and robot wrists with straightforward I/O and steady output;
  • Meca-Sequence coordinates triggers, limits, and interlocks so energy arrives at the correct instant, while logging parameters for compliance and SPC.

Interface tooling concentrates energy into the conductive path while protecting surfaces. Custom busbar horns are profiled to tab geometry and laminated stacks so energy lands in the bond zone, not on visible faces. Dedicated locating nests preserve flatness and alignment, helping maintain low ohmic losses at each connection and clean cosmetics.

Motion hardware reaches every weld site without redesigning the line:

  • ML 40 indexes along modules with long, accurate travel to address multiple points;
  • ML 32 serves compact fixtures with short, controlled strokes near tight features;
  • UBC functions as a small-footprint axis for repeatable horn and nest placement where space is limited.

Production enclosures sustain throughput and protect the workspace. Sound-damped cabins with rotary or indexing tables and parallel heads raise parts-per-hour, contain noise, and keep surfaces clean. Maintenance access and orderly routing support stable uptime on pack lines.

Not all joints sit on the main press. The Ultrasonic Handgun and Pencil Probe address edge bonds, prototypes, and local rework. On-tool adjustments keep changes fast, while light, balanced bodies reach confined features and deliver tidy, repeatable connections at benches or finishing cells.

Taken together, these elements address the core requirements: minimal heat at the cell, low electrical resistance, rapid cycles, and complete traceability from first article to sustained EV production.

Our technologies

To meet our customers’ needs, we’ve developed different techniques which are specific to each field of application and adaptable to each project. We now offer ultrasonic, spin, hot air/thermal, hot plate, vibration and laser welding solutions.

Our fields of application

Our leadership in plastic welding and ultrasonic cutting comes from our ability to innovate and meet the expectations of our customers in sectors like the automotive industry, cosmetics, household appliances, electronics, recreation and leisure, medicine, packaging and the textile industry as well as in non-ferrous metals, the agrifood industry and many more.

Made in France

All of our products are devised, designed and manufactured at our French site located in Juvigny in Haute Savoie. This is to make sure we offer products of exceptional quality.

We manage all of our business in local and international markets from this site. The presence of various partners on all the continents means we can extend our area of action and offer you effective local services anywhere in the world.

We’re ready for your future

A member of the Industry of the Future Alliance and recognized as suppliers of industry 4.0 solutions, we’re also stakeholders committed to the future 4th industrial revolution.

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