The occurrence of fires in electric vehicles (EVs) is less common than their combustion engine counterparts. That’s in total number but also in terms of the rate per mile traveled. However infrequent, it is extremely important to protect the vehicle’s occupants. Moreover, prolonging the time for a fire to exit the battery pack as long as possible. The key method of achieving this is the proper choice and deployment of fire protection materials throughout the battery pack. The rapidly growing EV market across segments goes beyond just cars, such as buses, trucks, vans, scooters, and motorcycles. Therefore, presenting great and varied opportunities for material suppliers to enable safer battery packs. IDTechEx’s new report, “Fire Protection Materials for Electric Vehicle Batteries 2023-2033,” analyses trends in battery design, safety regulations, and how these will impact fire protection materials.

No more battery material fire fires

The report benchmarks materials directly and in the application within EV battery packs. The materials covered include ceramic blankets/sheets (and other non-wovens), mica, aerogels, coatings (intumescent and other), encapsulants, encapsulating foams, compression pads, phase change materials, and several other materials. The report also includes 10-year market forecasts by material and vehicle categories.

Variety in Battery Design and Evolution

The EV market has yet to converge on a single battery design at any level. One only has to consider the cell format, where prismatic took around 55% of the car market in 2021, with the rest split fairly evenly between cylindrical and pouch. The thermal management strategy also varies between manufacturers. Moreover, with cold plates beneath the cells being the most popular option. But sidewall-cooled and air-cooled batteries also present significant adoption.

Many manufacturers are also moving towards a cell-to-pack design. It’s where they remove module housings (and a host of other materials), leading to better energy density. However, with potentially more challenging thermal runaway propagation prevention. These design choices greatly impact the choice and deployment of fire protection materials. They are also in IDTechEx’s report to aid in determining material demands.

Ceramic blankets have been a common choice. They provide protection above the cells and below the lid and to delay fire propagation outside the pack. In recent years, we have seen many adopt thick mica sheets to provide fire protection and excellent electrical isolation. Aerogels are not new, but their application within EV batteries has largely seen limits in volume and constrainment to China. However, major player Aspen Aerogels is securing a supply agreement with GM for its Ultium battery pack, moving the technology to the US.

The use of encapsulating foams has also seen significant adoption for cylindrical cell battery packs. For instance. with the likes of Tesla, to provide lightweight thermal insulation and structure. For pouch cells, compression pads are commonplace to accommodate cell swelling. Many are now combining this functionality with fire protection to provide a multifunctional solution. There are a host of materials in addition to the ones mentioned above that can aid in the safety of battery packs by preventing the propagation of thermal runaways and/or containing fire events. The variety of battery design philosophies presents opportunities for many fire protection materials and their suppliers; in fact, IDTechEx predicts a 13-fold increase in yearly demand for fire protection materials in EV batteries by 2033 compared to 2022.

Developments in Safety Regulations

Many will be aware that China was an early adopter of thermal runaway-specific regulations. Moreover, among other requirements, a need to prevent fire or smoke from exiting the battery pack for 5 minutes after the event occurs. This standard was mandated from the start of 2021. And while a formal mandate similar to this is yet to be applied in other regions, OEMs have started targeting this or more stringent requirements in their designs to pre-empt future regulations and improve overall safety.

The EV market in India has exhibited a large transition in safety. In 2022, several fires in electric scooters were exhibited, and many recalls were issued. The governing bodies have now set adjustments (to take place from October 2022) to the current standards. Moreover, to include more of a focus on EV battery safety in micromobility segments. In addition to only using approved cells, battery design features like inter-cell spacing are also stated. The increasingly safety-focused regulations across multiple global regions mean that the focus on safety and materials that aid in that goal will become increasingly utilized across vehicle segments.

Although, the choice and application of these materials will vary between the vehicle category and battery design. While the vehicle segments outside of automotive are important, IDTechEx’s research shows that the combination of relatively large batteries and huge unit volumes sees electric cars accounting for over 90% of the fire protection materials market for EVs by the end of the decade.

To find out more about the brand new IDTechEx report “Fire Protection Materials for Electric Vehicle Batteries 2023-2033”, including downloadable sample pages, please visit www.IDTechEx.com/FPM.

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