I've just ran across two mentions in Scott Manley's videos of LiPo batteries (Lithium-polymer) in first stage launch applications. These involve power levels of megawatts.
- Why The Electron Rocket May Be Cheapest Way To Get To Space Jan 2018
- Does ARCAspace's Water & Electric Powered Rocket Make Sense? May 2019
Many/most large terrestrial transportation applications that I've heard of use lithium ion batteries, often made up of a collection of 18650 cells.
Are LiPo batteries more suitable for 1st stage rockets than Li-ion batteries? If so, why?
above: Cropped from Why The Electron Rocket May Be Cheapest Way To Get To Space below: from Does ARCAspace's Water & Electric Powered Rocket Make Sense?
C
a discharge rate of1 C
means we release the stored energy in 1 hour. A lower stage might burn say 2.5 min which means we need a discharge rate of24 C
if we want to completly discharge our batteries which is high but managable for LiPo commonly used in e.g. fpv drones and rc cars (they go up to ~75 and are marketed up to a constant 100). I have no idea about Li-ion batteries therefore just a comment. The internal resistance is the limiting problem here. $\endgroup$min(specific power * burn time, specific energy)
. But if you throw away your batteries like the electron does you basically only care for specific power so that you can throw away a battery pack as often as possible. You don't want to take the batteries all the way to space with you. $\endgroup$