Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10397/112781
Title: Underground fires induced by disposed Li-ion battery in peatland and landfill
Authors: Chen, Y 
Zhang, L 
Zhang, Y 
Zhou, Y 
Zhang, Z 
Lin, S 
Wei, W
Huang, X 
Issue Date: 2025
Source: Process safety and environmental protection, Available online 1 May 2025, In Press, Journal Pre-proof, 107235
Abstract: Battery-induced fires have become an increasing concern, posing significant environmental and safety risks. This work investigates the smoldering ignition of underground fire in peatland and landfill waste by disposed Lithium-ion batteries. The internal and external short circuits of 18650 cylindrical battery cell are triggered to initiate in-depth fire of typical landfill soil waste with various moisture contents. Results show that a minimum state of charge (SOC) of 50% is required for battery thermal runaway to initiate a smoldering fire in the dry waste, which increases with waste moisture. About 18 ± 5% of battery energy is transferred to the waste within 6-10 min as effective heating for smoldering ignition. For external short circuits, the major ignition source is the Joule heating of the external resistor, not the heating from the battery itself. The propensity of ignition is controlled by both heating intensity and duration, which varies with the battery SOC and external resistance. A fully charged cell (internal resistance of 35 mΩ) requires a minimum external resistance of 60 mΩ to ignite the dry waste. If the moisture of waste reaches 30% or above, a single cell cannot initiate a smoldering fire, regardless of external or internal short circuits in current test setups. This work reveals a possible mechanism of landfill fires induced by disposed battery failure and thermal runaway, highlight fire safe issue of disposed batteries, and improves the wildfire prevention and suppression strategies for landfills.
Keywords: Battery thermal runaway
Landfill fire
Li-ion battery
Short circuit
Smoldering ignition
Waste fire
Publisher: Elsevier Ltd
Journal: Process safety and environmental protection 
ISSN: 0957-5820
EISSN: 1744-3598
DOI: 10.1016/j.psep.2025.107235
Appears in Collections:Journal/Magazine Article

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