Hello Bruce,

I think my experience may be helpful to you. The only Lithium battery chemistry 
that we sell is LFP or LFMP, both use Li Iron Phosphate for the cathode. We 
have sold many hundreds of Li battery systems since 2013 and there have been no 
fires reported to us. Our customers include off grid, marine and RV use, 
industrial such as pipeline SCADA controls, law enforcement agencies and more. 
So we have a broad range of customers and applications. 

This chemistry is considered “safer” than others for a number of reasons. I 
recommend you study the report from "The Fire Protection Research Foundation" 
here: 
https://www.nfpa.org/-/media/Files/News-and-Research/Fire-statistics-and-reports/Hazardous-materials/rflithiumionbatterieshazard.ashx
I'm in no way saying that LFP is always safe but with a well designed 
management system, I believe they are safer than any flooded LA battery and the 
least likely to cause a fire.

A few years ago, I was privy to see destructive tests performed on 2 of the 3 
brands that we offer. In the tests, battery cells (with no BMS or EMS) were 
charged far over recommended voltage, stabbed with spikes at low speed and by 
high speed impact, crushed in a press, and in one case shot with 12 gauge 
shotgun. The results were always an exothermic release of heat and steam or 
smoke but no flames. The results are similar to this comparison video showing 
NMC cells (extreme thermal event) and LFP cells heating up. 
https://youtu.be/bnzxrnS0JkE

ANY Li battery being sold without charge protection below freezing is 
potentially dangerous. There are batteries being sold with only a brief warning 
message or mention in the manual. Instead they should all have active charge 
protection. What if the user accidentally charged a frozen Li battery? 
Depending on current and temperature, Li plating leading to dendrite formation 
will occur. This is a dangerous condition that can continue growth and lead to 
thermal runaway at any time, even long after the damage occurred. Some of you 
are installing these batteries. Don’t ask me to name a brand, just study the 
product you use…for everyones good.

Larry Crutcher
Starlight Solar Power Systems


On Apr 9, 2020, at 4:07 PM, Bruce Leininger <bjleinin...@gmail.com> wrote:

Hi.  I was wondering if there are any known instances of fires from residential 
or commercial storage systems.  I'm specifically interested in lithium ion 
batteries, but would welcome knowledge about lead acid fires as well.

Thanks!

Bruce

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