As electric vehicles and their charging stations , a Missouri University of Science and Technology professor is leading research about the fire risks they pose.
, but lithium-ion batteries that power the vehicles can produce fires that burn many times hotter than gasoline and can be difficult to extinguish.
That鈥檚 because they start with an uncontrolled chemical reaction inside the car battery that releases what Missouri S&T researcher Guang Xu calls simply 鈥渁 huge amount of heat.鈥 The fires continue until the reaction has completed. Even extinguished lithium-ion batteries can be prone to reigniting.
Xu, a professor of mining and nuclear engineering, said that electric vehicles are generally safe, but that there needs to be more research on what might happen as they and their chargers become more common. On Thursday, the California Air Resources Board after 2035. California's move should reshape the U.S. car market by quickening the transition to electric vehicles, the Associated Press reports.
Updates to building code and evacuation protocols need to follow that same pace, Xu said.
鈥淟et鈥檚 say a parking garage attached to an office building or apartment complex has electric vehicle charging stations, and there is a fire.鈥 he said. 鈥淲hat are the protocols to evacuate? How do you put out that kind of fire? We don鈥檛 know, yet.鈥
In July 2020, an electric vehicle in a mine in Onaping, Ontario, caught fire underground. No one was hurt in that Canadian fire, though the miners, some with decades of experience, were unsure what to do.
鈥淭hey knew what to do in case of a diesel fire, an oil fire, many different types of fire, but not an EV fire,鈥 Xu said. 鈥淲e need to know the risks and how to mitigate them before an incident, and not wait for a tragedy.鈥
Xu鈥檚 research at Missouri S&T focuses on how EV fires start while connected to a charging source, what kinds of gases they produce and how to best control such a fire.
鈥淲e want to develop preparation and mitigation standards to help EV users, firefighters and others know what to do,鈥 Xu said.
He is sharing his data with vehicle and charger manufacturers as well as people who write building codes and develop standards for firefighters.
There is a desire for this kind of information, according to the Fire Protection Research Foundation. 鈥淢embers of the emergency response community have questions regarding personal protective equipment; firefighting suppression tactics; and the best practices for overhaul and post-fire clean-up,鈥 the organization looking to quantify best practices when combating an EV fire.
Xu and his colleagues held a workshop this spring at Missouri S&T to address EV fire risks. Attendees included vehicle manufacturers, industrial EV users, fire safety experts and university researchers.
He plans to make it an annual event.
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