China Safety Science Journal ›› 2024, Vol. 34 ›› Issue (6): 65-72.doi: 10.16265/j.cnki.issn1003-3033.2024.06.0945

• Safety engineering technology • Previous Articles     Next Articles

Simulation study on heat transfer of thermal runaway lithium-ion battery in confined space

ZHANG Qingsong1(), JIA Yan1, ZHAI Qiyue2, LIU Tiantian1   

  1. 1 Key Laboratory of Civil Aviation Thermal Hazards Prevention and Emergency Response, Civil Aviation University of China, Tianjin 300300, China
    2 Beijing AVIC Jianyan Aviation Design & Consulting Co., Beijing 100084, China
  • Received:2023-12-14 Revised:2024-03-16 Online:2024-06-28 Published:2024-12-28

Abstract:

To investigate the source and proportion of thermal runaway heat transfer of lithium-ion batteries in confined conditions space such as aviation transportation, the 18650 lithium-ion battery (100% state of charge) with lithium cobalt oxide (LCO) as the cathode material was used. The heat transfer model of thermal runaway of lithium-ion batteries was proposed by ANSYS Fluent software. Furthermore, the pyrolysis gas generated by the first battery and its thermal runaway was used as the heat source, and the second battery was heated to thermal runaway through radiation and convection. The results showed that when 2nd battery reached the thermal runaway temperature, the heat generated by the internal side reaction accounted for 30.01% of the total energy. The gas combustion generated by the 1st battery thermal runaway provided energy for 2nd battery thermal runaway, accounting for 5.64% of the total energy. When 2nd battery reached the maximum temperature, the heat generated inside the battery accounted for 87.39%, and the energy provided by the gas combustion was 1.76%. the pyrolysis gas combustion accelerates 2nd battery's thermal runaway, though it is a heat source, it is not a heat source. Although the combustion of pyrolysis gas accelerated the thermal runaway process of 2nd battery, the proportion of energy provided was relatively small.

Key words: confined space, lithium-ion battery, thermal runaway heat transfer, Fluent, internal side reactions, gas combustion

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