Fire Blankets and Li-Ion Battery Fires

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A lithium-ion (li-ion) battery fire needs three things to keep on burning. These three essentials are heat, oxygen, and something to burn. A fire blanket, usually made of glass fiber or kevlar, cuts off oxygen if tightly wrapped around a burning object. However, the U.S. Fire Protection Association confirms that fire blankets and li-ion battery fires are incompatible, including in electric vehicles.

Why Fire Blankets Do Not Put Out These Fires

Lithium-ion batteries are highly heat-sensitive. Fire can spread between cells during a process called thermal runaway. Most extinguishing methods work by depriving a fire of oxygen from the air.

Lithium-ion battery fires are immune to most of these methods. This is because the lithium-salts in their electrolytes are self-oxidizing, meaning they release their own oxygen if they overheat.

This is why we cannot ‘oxygen starve’ lithium-ion battery fires with most fire extinguishers, including fire blankets. Now we understand how fire blankets and li-ion battery fires are miles apart, what else can we do?

Extinguishing Lithium-Ion Fires Without Fire Blankets

The report by the U.S. Fire Protection Association that we link to below, highlights the potential risks of using fire blankets on lithium-ion fires. The document goes as far as warning of a potential explosion hazard, when fire blankets are used.

The association issued their warning in the context of electric vehicle fires involving lithium batteries. We believe it applies equally to any device containing these batteries, and so this warning has household applications too.

The Fire Safety Research Institute of Underwriters Limited, has issued an Immediate Safety Advisory we link to below. This warns that, ‘when flaming is eliminated by a fire blanket: The ongoing accumulation of flammable gases released by continued thermal runaway in the battery pack, presents a potential explosion risk’.

There are only two ways, as far we are aware, to deal with a lithium-ion battery fire:

  • If the appliance containing the battery is small, a firefighter may have some success with an approved lithium fire extinguisher.
  • If you are a fire professional faced by a burning electric vehicle, cool the vehicle with copious water to prevent the fire spreading.

Your life and your welfare are precious. Unless you are a fire professional, step aside and request help. The best way to deal with a lithium-ion battery fire is often to let it burn itself out, while cooling the environment with copious amounts of water.

More Information

Are Electric Vehicle Fires Still Increasing?

Water Does Not Extinguish Lithium Fires

Preview Image: Lithium Is Inherently Unstable

Article by National Fire Protection Association May 30, 2025

Advisory by Fire Safety Research Institute May 30, 2025

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About Author

I have been writing about batteries and energy storage for more than ten years, and have published over 4,000 articles on this website. During that time, I have researched developments across lead-acid, lithium-ion, sodium-ion, flow batteries, and emerging energy-storage technologies. My goal is to explain complex battery concepts in clear, practical language that anyone can understand. My writing career began unexpectedly after leaving the corporate world. What started as a search for a new direction gradually became a fascination with batteries, renewable energy, and the science that powers modern life. Writing may not have made me wealthy, but it has given me the opportunity to explore an industry that continues to evolve in remarkable ways.

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