Are dendrites assaulting Boeing batteries?

A possible culprit is identified in the Dreamliner fire investigation.

By Benzinga Feb 12, 2013 12:29PM
Boeing 737s copyright Bryan Mulder, Flickr, Getty ImagesBy Tim Parker 

Sure, the Boeing (BA) saga isn't the front page story that it was in January, but anybody who is long the stock wants to see the Dreamliner flying again. Traders are betting that the stock will see at least a short-term bounce when the planes are flying again with paying passengers on board rather than investigators.


The newest theory reported by the Wall Street Journal is that dendrites are one of the main focuses of investigators right now. Don't know what a dendrite is? Here's the run-down.


Lithium-ion batteries were first conceptualized in the late 1970s and are now used in everything from portable electronics to cars and aerospace applications. They work by using lithium ions to move current from the negative to the positive electrode during discharge and from the positive to the negative electrode during charging.


But over time, after repeated charge and discharge, dendrites can form. Dendrites are tiny fibers that form on the battery's anodes -- the area of the battery where chemical reactions occur. Dendrites can cause short circuits in the battery creating rapid heat buildup leading to a thermal runaway -- the process that caused the fire in the Dreamliners, according to the NTSB.


If dendrites prove to be the problem, that may create an even larger issue for Boeing. Electrochemical engineers don't yet have a solution for the dendrite problem. They've made progress but most ideas are still theoretical.


The Engineer reports that a prototype zinc-anode battery was developed at the City University of New York that overcomes the dendrite problem, but that likely would not be a cost-effective option for years into the future if at all.


Critics are asking if the FAA and Boeing put too much faith (and maybe too much current) into these batteries due to well-known safety concerns. In a 2010 article, Gizmag quoted Professor Clare Grey as saying, "Fire safety is a major problem that must be solved before we can get to the next generation of lithium-ion batteries and before we can safely use these batteries in a wider range of transportation applications."


Investigators have focused on the batteries from the beginning. As the systems that charged the batteries were found to be functioning properly, investigators turned their sites back to the physical makeup of the batteries.


Boeing was up fractionally in trading Tuesday.


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1Comment
Feb 12, 2013 12:52PM
avatar
Dendrites forming ARE bad....decouple the battery and hit it with a brief-momentary high-voltage reverse bias polarity and essentially blow-out / burn up those denrites. You can do this several times before battery replacement is required. Other than that...I don't know how to keep the dendrites from forming either.
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