While lead-acid batteries are generally safe, improper installation or abuse can create fire hazards. Understanding and preventing these risks is essential for every solar installation.
What Causes Battery Fires
- Hydrogen gas explosion: Lead-acid batteries emit hydrogen during charging. If concentration exceeds 4% in a confined space, any spark causes explosion. Prevention: adequate ventilation.
- Thermal runaway: Overcharging causes heating, which accelerates charging, creating a feedback loop. Can cause fire in extreme cases. Prevention: temperature-compensated charging, proper voltage settings.
- Electrical arcs: Loose connections cause arcing, igniting hydrogen. Prevention: proper torque on all connections.
- External fire: Batteries can contribute to, rather than cause, fire in building emergencies.
Ventilation Requirements
Hydrogen release rate = 0.000016 x n x I (liters/second per cell)
For a 48V bank with 200A charging: 24 cells x 0.000016 x 200 = 0.077 L/s = 277 L/hour of hydrogen at full charge rate. Room must be sized accordingly with natural or mechanical ventilation.
Fire Suppression
- ABC powder extinguisher within 3 meters of battery bank
- CO2 extinguishers are safe for electrical fires and won’t damage batteries
- Water is acceptable for flooded lead-acid but not preferred for electrical fires
- Install smoke detectors in battery rooms
Emergency Response
- Evacuate area immediately
- Call fire services
- Do not attempt to extinguish unless trained and equipped
- If safe to do so: disconnect battery bank from all sources and loads
- For acid spills: use baking soda to neutralize