Storage Safety

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Lakshmi, it would be good to add a sentence or 2 up front with a "Welcome to EPRI's ____ page" explaining what this page os for and who it is available to to help orient anyone that is visiting.

EPRI's energy storage safety research is focused in three areas:

Establishing safety practices

  • Includes codes, standards, and guidelines for safe deployment and operation

Characterize safety hazards

  • Understanding failure modes and consequences, and developing mitigations to reduce the likelihood and severity of failures

Develop and demonstrate community solutions

  • Intended to support public safety and community resilience, like disaster recovery


Background

By its very nature any form of stored energy poses some sort of hazard. In general, energy that is stored may be released in an uncontrolled manner, potentially endangering equipment, the environment, or people. All energy storage systems have hazards. Some hazards are easily mitigated to reduce risk, and others require more dedicated planning and execution to maintain safety.

The vast majority of new grid-scale energy storage uses lithium ion battery technology. Lithium ion technology is ubiquitous. Cells and batteries using various lithium ion chemistries can be found in all kinds of consumer electrons and transportation technologies, including electric vehicles, e-bikes, and e-scooters. The main hazards posed by lithium ion systems include electric shock and arcing hazards from the presence of high voltage, and the risk of fire and/or explosion.

Lithium ion Thermal Runaway

Lithium ion cells can fail due to several factors:

  • Manufacturing defects
  • Subject to over-voltage condition
  • Subject to over-current condition
  • Subject to over-temperature condition
  • Physical shock, impact, or damage

Any of these failure modes can lead to the cell experiencing high temperatures. If the temperature exceeds a certain threshold, thermal runaway follows. Thermal runaway occurs when high temperatures cause the internal chemical components of the cell to break down, generating more heat in an accelerating manner. The accelerated reaction generates more heat, which causes the reaction to accelerate further, in a positive feedback loop that begins to exceed the ability of the cell to reject heat to its surrounding structure and environment. This reaction then can vaporize the organic electrolyte and release flammable and particle laden gasses at extreme temperatures.

When the flammable gasses mix with oxygen, it creates the potential for fire or explosion. Only an ignition source is required, which is usually present during the thermal runaway process in the form of very hot particulates, high voltage and overheated components.

Preventing Failures

Lithium ion cell failures are rare. Cell failures can be avoided through careful monitoring of cell voltage, temperatures, and current, to ensure that cells are maintained with their safe operating ranges. Effective and reliable thermal management is necessary to avoid overheating cells during operation. Additionally, manufacturing and quality controls are necessary to ensure cells perform uniformly and are made without defects that could lead to unexpected failures. As an owner, operator, or customer, choose products that are certified to the appropriate safety standards. Vet suppliers to ensure they have sufficient quality control on their manufacturing. Specify the inclusion of monitoring and safety systems.

Mitigation of Fire and Explosion Risk

Once a cell has failed, it is still possible to avoid catastrophic consequences. Mitigation strategies can include design elements to detect and arrest cell failures early in the process, to avoid thermal runaway. Other design elements, like deflagration vents and fire suppression, avoid propagating failures and can reduce the consequences of failures. Much of EPRI's research is focused on system-level and procedural mitigations to limit the risk of lithium ion battery installations.

EPRI Storage Safety Research

EPRI is conducting a phased research program titled Fire Prevention and Mitigation. This program is focused on characterizing the risks of lithium ion technology, especially of thermal runaway failures. The program also develops best practices for deployment and operation of storage, conducting site-specific assessments and studies with industry partners. Through these projects, generalized resources, templates, and guides are developed to support the industry as a whole.

The Fire Prevention and Mitigation is currently in Phase 2, focused on the development of a Project Lifecycle Safety Toolkit. Funders of Phase 2 can access the project page here. Phase 3 will begin in 2024. EPRI continuously publishes research and resources developed through this project. Many of them are publicly available, listed below:

Publicly available energy storage safety resources.
Resource Description
EPRI BESS Failure Event Database Gather information on battery failures around the world.
Residential Energy Storage Safety Guide Guide for safe installation and use of residential energy storage systems, for homeowners and installers.
ESIC Energy Storage Reference Fire Hazard Mitigation Analysis This document uses a bowtie framework to identify hazards, threats, consequences and barriers around fire and explosion risks for Lithium-ion energy storage systems.
Energy Storage Safety Roadmap This roadmap provides necessary information to support owners, operators, and developers of energy storage in proactively designing, building, operating, and maintaining these systems to minimize fire risk and ensure the safety of the public, operators, and environment. The roadmap processes the findings and lessons learned from eight energy storage site evaluations and meetings with industry experts to build a comprehensive plan for safe BESS deployment.
The Difference Between Thermal Runaway and Ignition of a Lithium-ion Battery This white paper examines the thermal runaway process to differentiate thermal runaway from battery fire ignition. Understanding how thermal runaway occurs and contributes to battery fire and explosion risks enables improved system design for fire prevention and mitigation.
Carnegie Road Energy Storage System Failure Response, Recovery, and Rebuild Lessons Learned This report conveys the lessons learned from the Carnegie Road energy storage system (ESS) failure event in the UK, including aspects of emergency response, root cause investigation, and the redesign and rebuild processes.