Atmosphere-regulated thermal runaway characteristics and multidimensional safety assessment of sodium-ion and lithium-ion batteries
Zhixiang Cheng, Zhiyuan Li, Yuxuan Li, Yin Yu, Chaoshi Liu, Zhenwei Wu, Peiyu Duan, Li Huang, Wenxin Mei, Qingsong Wang
Abstract
Understanding and quantifying the thermal runaway behavior of emerging battery chemistries is essential for ensuring safety in real-world applications. This study systematically investigates the thermal runaway characteristics of sodium-ion (SIB) and lithium-ion (LIB) batteries of comparable volumes under both air and inert gas environments. Experimental results show that under low-oxygen conditions, SIB and nickel–cobalt–manganese (NCM) cells exhibit substantial mitigation of thermal runaway severity, including over 35 % decrease in gas generation metrics, while lithium iron phosphate (LFP) cells remain largely unaffected. In gas composition analysis, NCM cells show significant decreases in CO 2 /CO and O 2 /N 2 ratios, whereas SIB and LFP display no notable compositional changes. Based on experimental data and literature, a multidimensional database of thermal runaway parameters is developed, incorporating metrics such as gas explosiveness, toxicity, and heat of combustion. Three classical multi-criteria evaluation methods—Technique for Order Preference by Similarity to Ideal Solution, Principal Component Analysis, and a median-based approach—are applied and compared. To address limitations arising from dimensional and variance scale differences among parameters, an expected contribution method is proposed to enable balanced and consistent scoring. Results demonstrate that this method enhances fairness and interpretability, particularly in scenarios with substantial scale disparities among variables arising from cross-battery systems. This work establishes a quantitative safety assessment framework that enables cross-platform comparisons and provides guidance for battery system design, risk zoning, and thermal mitigation strategies. The framework is broadly applicable to emerging battery chemistries and advances battery safety evaluation across diverse application environments.