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Power Generation and Storage

Carbon Fiber Sleeve Tempers Battery Thermal Runaway
The CFRP sleeve was originally intended for crewed space flight lithium-ion 18650 battery packs rated over 80 Watt-hours (Wh), which are required to be passively propagation-resistant for increased safety. Previous battery designs have addressed SWR propagation by using aluminum or steel interstitial materials to prevent SWRs from directly impacting neighboring cells, but these materials were underperforming.
During testing of 18650 battery cells, it was discovered that cells over 2.6Ah in capacity can have an undesirable failure mode in which the cell wall will rupture or breach during a thermal runaway (TR) event sending heat and ejecta into an undesirable direction. TR is typically triggered when heat produced by the battery cell’s exothermic reaction leads to increased and escalating internal cell temperature, pressure, and boiling of the electrolytes. When internal cell pressure exceeds the cell’s safety relief mechanism, rupture or bursting can occur, initiating a cell-to-cell propagation that in turn results in a battery pack fire.
By adding a carbon fiber reinforced polymer (CFRP) sleeve to cylindrical battery cells, a sidewall rupture (SWR) can be prevented from occurring or propagating. In initial testing, there were no SWRs of a battery cell using a CFRP sleeve. This result is believed to be due in part to a unique characteristic of CFRP sleeves compared to other materials. Carbon fiber material has a negative coefficient of expansion and accordingly shrinks when heated, while steel and aluminum expand. The shrinking of the CFRP sleeve when heated compresses the cell located within it, significantly aiding in the prevention of SWR.
This technology can be implemented into other multi-physics battery safety models to guide the design of the next generation of battery cells and battery packs.
This thermal runaway propagation resistant technology has a technology readiness level (TRL) of 6 (System/sub-system model or prototype demonstration in an operational environment) and is now available for patent licensing. Please note that NASA does not manufacture products itself for commercial sale.
Power Generation and Storage

Ram-Dent Thermal Runaway Triggering Device
The Ram-Dent Thermal Runaway Triggering Device is capable of trig-gering mild short circuits that are similar to internal defects, and more extreme short circuits that are comparable to those initiated by an implanted internal short circuit device – all without having to modify the battery cell in any way. The device imparts a high velocity, low mass blunt impact onto a small surface area of a Li-ion battery cell can wall allowing a small hemispherical dent to form. This impact deforms and tears the internal separator of the battery cell, causing a short circuit, and induces thermal runaway.
Several methods for initiating TR on demand currently exist, but they have characteristics and biases that make them more unfavorable for certain testing objectives. Heat-based insult in any form requires additional thermal energy to be applied to the battery cell, potentially distorting the signal-to-noise ratio in FTRC measurement, and increas-ing the severity of failure beyond what is intended. This methodology also requires time to heat the battery cell to critical temperature, and it potentially weakens the battery cell can wall causing abnormal kinetics and rupture. Mechanical insult methodologies, such as crush testing and nail penetration, have unique applications but rely on deformation of the battery cell itself which alters the flow characteristics of internal gases and the material integrity of the battery cell.
This technology aims to solve these limitations by implementing a cost-effective method to create a natural short circuit failure in Li-ion batteries that does not alter nominal vent paths and energy yields, potentially yielding the most unbiased calorimeter tallies yet.
The Ram-Dent Thermal Runaway Triggering Device is at a technology readiness level (TRL) 4 (component and/or breadboard validation in laboratory environment) and is now available for patent licensing. Please note that NASA does not manufacture products itself for commercial sale.