Posted on 03/18/2013 8:36:42 AM PDT by null and void
The Boeing Co. took the issue of 787 battery fires head-on last night, definitively declaring that with pending modifications to its lithium-ion battery packs, a fire cant begin, develop, or be sustained.
Speaking at a technical briefing in Tokyo that was broadcast live on the Web, Boeing executives defended the performance of the embattled 787 batteries in recent overheating incidents, and added that its engineers have strengthened the design of the packs with a number of technical enhancements. Most important, they said, is the addition of a new enclosure that prevents fires.
I want to be very, very clear on this point, said Mike Sinnett, vice president and chief engineer of the 787 program. This enclosure keeps us from ever having a fire to begin with. Thats the number one job of this enclosure. It eliminates the possibility of fire.
In a teleconference that lasted approximately an hour, Sinnett laid out a number of fixes for the battery packs, but most strongly emphasized the capabilities of the enclosure. The enclosure, he said repeatedly, would eliminate the possibility of fire and vent gases through a dedicated line. It would also protect the electronics bay and any surrounding equipment from heat vented by the battery during an incident.
If a [battery] cell were to vent, it would vent into this enclosure, he explained. It ruptures a burst disc in the enclosure, which allows all those gases to go immediately overboard.
Boeing added electrical isolators, drain holes, heat-resistant sleeves, and dielectric isolators as a means of reducing the possibility of ignition. A new enclosure also ensures that no oxygen is available for combustion. (Source: The Boeing Co.)
The key to preventing fires is to carefully control the amount of available oxygen, Sinnett said. Describing a potential scenario, he explained that the pressure disc in the rear of the enclosure would open after about 1.5 seconds of cell venting. Vented electrolyte would then entrain the air inside the enclosure and take it overboard... So as long as we keep the vented air out of the battery enclosure, theres no oxygen to support combustion."
Sinnett also detailed a number of other fixes for the lithium-ion battery packs. He said engineers wrapped the cells in an electric isolator to make sure they cant short circuit, tightened nuts on top of the plate that connects the cells, added drain holes to make sure there was a path for moisture to exit, improved the heat resistance of the wire bundles on top of the battery, added heat-resistant sleeves to prevent wire chafing, and employed dielectric isolators above, below, and around the battery. All of those changes are aimed at reducing the possibility of ignition, he said.
To reduce the possibility of overcharging, Boeing engineers also dropped the upper voltage limit of the battery and raised the lower limit. Dropping the upper limit reduces the potential energy in the battery, while boosting the lower limit protects against a deep discharge event that can cause damage to a cell.
Sinnett defended the performance of the lithium-ion battery packs to date, contending that there was no fire in the Takamatsu incident. He also said that other battery chemistries have been known to have problems.
We use lead-acid in some of our airplanes. We use ni-cad in some of our airplanes. And its surprising for many people to know that in the last 10 years, there have been thousands upon thousands of battery failures on commercial airplanes. Many of those have resulted in smoke and fire events.
Boeing has been testing its new battery design for about six weeks and is about one-third of the way through its certification plan. During tests, engineers have been able to demonstrate that when the battery vented, the enclosure contained no vented electrolytes. Using test rigs over approximately 60,000 hours, theyve also been able to show that no fire is possible inside the battery, according to Sinnett.
Battery experts contacted by Design News questioned the solution, however, especially with regard to no oxygen being available for combustion. Theres oxygen in the positive electrode, Donald Sadoway, John F. Elliott Professor of materials chemistry at MIT, wrote in an email to Design News. If the temperature exceeds a certain value, oxygen is liberated and fans the fire.
Inside the battery, there are all the necessary ingredients for thermal runaway, added Elton Cairns, professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering the University of California Berkeley, in an email to Design News.
Questions about lithium-ion also prompted Airbus to drop plans for using the technology. The company had originally proposed to use it on its A350 airliner, but opted out after the Boeing incidents, according to several news reports.
Boeing acknowledged that its engineers still dont know the reason for the fire at Bostons Logan Airport, despite lengthy analyses by the National Transportation Safety Board.
In the events of Logan and Takamatsu, we may never get to the single root cause, Sinnett said. But the process we used to understand what improvements can be made is the most robust process weve ever followed in improving a part in our history.
This is your pilot speaking “Even God and icebergs can’t put this plane down.”
Their claim is probably accurate.
The battery won’t catch fire.
It’ll just explode instead...
I own Boeing stock and root for them when deserved, but this is just papering over the problem. Batteries shouldn’t catch fire. Period. Fix THAT problem.
The pressure has to go somewhere.
Much of the same green thinking that went into these batteries were what caused the Columbia disaster, I pray we don’t see another caused because of PC thinking here.
Seems the best foam was not used on the SS because of ozone restrictions by the EPA, even though when that bad boy went THROUGH the ozone it did about a million times more damage to it than a few whiffs of esters ever could.
Why are they using these at all, to reduce running the APU?
ping
Other than that, how did you enjoy the play Mrs. Lincoln?
My policy is to never buy a car that is in it’s first model year, or to fly on a new model airplane.
I won’t fly on an A-380 for a couple more years or a 787 for at least 5.
This is big news here (seattle area). In none of the reports has there been note that the battery is fixed.
Just that it is contained.
Comforting. /s
Travel over 60 mph will suck the air out of passengers' lungs and cause them to suffocate.
Shut down the patent office. Everything that will be invented has been invented.
If we listened to this advice, there would never be technological innovation. That innovation involves risk. Boeing will fix the problem while some just continue to wring their hands in despair.
Ah, the Apollo 13 solution - a burst disc.
It appears that you missed this part from the second paragraph... "...the pressure disc in the rear of the enclosure would open after about 1.5 seconds of cell venting. Vented electrolyte would then entrain the air inside the enclosure and 'take it overboard... So as long as we keep the vented air out of the battery enclosure, theres no oxygen to support combustion.'"
Precisely.
What? You mean eco-friendly terpenes don’t clean as well as Freons?
I wont fly on an A-380 for a couple more years or a 787 for at least 5.
Or buy any microsoft product before service pack 2
Quite.
Or switch from XP.
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