The July FVEAA meeting was extremely informative. Jerry Jackson's presentation about the state of battery technology was excellent, providing great insight into current battery technology and current road blocks.
The presentation included a photo of a laptop computer lithium battery fire. I would like to have also know if these fires have been caused by faulty manufacturing.
The presenation got me to thinging about fire risk on lithium batteries vs gas automobile fires. I found this article about auto fires in 2008:
"In 2005 alone, there were more than 266,000 car fires reported to various agencies across the country. In these accidents, 520 people died as a result of the fire. Automobile fires are one of the more common causes of fire-related property damage. In fact, there is one motor-vehicle fire roughly every minute and a half in the United States alone.
Cars have a tendency to ignite as there are so many things that are flammable. For starters, gasoline and oil are exceptionally flammable and are known to ignite. Upholstery and other solid combustibles are commonly the start of a fire as well. The detonators in air bags, electrical short circuits, and a hot exhaust system can all be sources of ignition." Joseph Devine
Article Source:
http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Joseph_DevineWikipedia claims: The United States is home to the largest passenger vehicle market of any country,[1] which is a consequence of the fact that it has the largest Gross Domestic Product of any country in the world.[2] Overall, there were an estimated 250,851,833 registered passenger vehicles in the United States according to a 2006 DOT study.[3]
That makes ~ 1 of every 1,000 cars catch fires each year.
Lithium battery fires are great attention grabbers, so they make for good news stories. I'm having a real problem putting my hands on real numbers. I know one company alone makes 50 million lithium batteries a year, so they must have 250 million on the market. How many lithium batteries are being used in the US today, billions to be sure. How many have caught on fire, hundreds... many are caused by cheap knock off companies after a quick buck.
Argonne National Labs says that Lithium Titanate batteries have excellent safety and perfomance while being an inexpensive technology:
www.transportation.anl.gov/pdfs/HV/461.pdfEnerDel and Atairnano both make Lithium Titanate batteries today! EnerDel claims they will make there packs available in 2010 model year cars for around $1,500. Sign me up to beta test right now.
http://www.nextenergynews.com/news1/next-energy-news9.28a.htmlWe need to find a way to make this technology available to our club. Our personal tax dollars support building this technology, why can't we use it!!!!!
Bob