Boeing
Dreamliner's Lithium-Ion Battery Fails On United Flight To Paris
Christine Negroni ,
CONTRIBUTOR
I write about the business
of aviation and travel.
Opinions expressed by
Forbes Contributors are their own.
Note: This story has been
updated to include comment from Boeing.
A United Airlines Boeing 787 experienced a lithium-ion battery failure on
approach to Charles de Gaulle Airport on November 13. United Flight 915 was at
the end of a seven-hour flight from Washington's Dulles Airport when pilots received
a warning that the main battery was overheating. United spokesman Charles
Hobart confirmed the event, which was first reported by the Aviation Herald.
Boeing provided photo
The battery vent on a
United 787
On landing, technicians discovered the battery "venting fluid," with
fluid dripping from the forward vent relief system, the titanium box and pipes
Boeing installed after the airplane was grounded in 2013.
Hobart would not answer other questions but the Aviation Herald reported the
airplane was in Paris for four days and brought to Denver, where it remained on
the ground for another two days before returning to service.
Paul Bergman, a spokesman for Boeing said "the plane experienced a fault
with a single cell," adding that it was not a safety of flight issue.
This is not the first Dreamliner battery to go haywire in the three and a half
years since the plane was released from its four-month, fleet-wide safety
grounding by the Federal Aviation Administration in 2013. That came after
battery malfunctions on two Japanese-operated 787s within two weeks of each
other destroyed the breadbox sized batteries and the area in which they sat,
prompting three safety investigations.
Photo courtesy of
passenger Kenichi Kawamura
An ANA 787 after an
emergency landing at Takamastu, Japan in January 2013
The Dreamliner was only allowed back in the air in April 2013, when Boeing got
approval to move the batteries into a housing designed to contain the toxic
fumes and high temperature fire that occur when a lithium-ion battery goes into
thermal runaway.
The housing did not change the characteristics of the battery and this most
recent event on a United flight is a clear sign that it still flies with an
undiagnosed and unresolved problem.
In January 2014, a battery cell on another Japan Airlines 787 vented as the plane
sat on the ground at Narita Airport. Later that year in October, a Qatar
Airways 787 was forced to divert because of a battery malfunction. And while I
was told there were two other diversions resulting from batteries going bad in
flight in the first 18 months after the plane began flying again, neither
Boeing nor the FAA would provide details.
When I asked again today if Boeing would provide a list of battery failures
since the resumption of 787 flights, Bergman declined. "More than 2.7
billion revenue miles have been flown by the approximately six hundred 787
Dreamliners currently in service," he said in an email.
Battery failures on those 600 airplanes are only knowable to Boeing because the
FAA previously said it does not require notification; not from Boeing not from
the Dreamliner's operators because the titanium housing removes the safety
threat from thermal runaways.
Battery experts disagree. After the Qatar diversion, Jeff Dahn, a physics
professor at Canada's Dalhousie University told me that battery failures are an
indication of a problem within the cells.
"Normally they will do nothing unless they are being mechanically abused
or electrically abused. Since they are in the box, they are probably not being
mechanically abused, so there is something going on with those cells."
Now that Dreamliner battery failures have been deemed
"non-reportable" by aviation safety authorities, it is impossible
gauge the size or the scope of the problem and that's how some folks seem to
want it. The question is "why?"
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