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#11
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10-02-2014, 02:47 AM
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Re: Pencil Battery Short Circuited in Child's Mouth
The most common name is AA, also called Pencil-sized, mignon, Type 316... it has even more common names but the list of IEC names is LR03 (alkaline) R03 (carbon–zinc) FR03 (Li–FeS2) HR03 (NiMH) KR03 (NiCd) ZR03 (NiOOH) Low voltage batteries contain high amount of energy, but what really caused this mess is the fact that he closed his mouth. When you short-circuit one (but he was handling 3 ones, in series) in open space apparently nothing happens: but if you twist the wire with your teeth and close your mouth, the small part of wire that gets vaporized in case of short-circuit will emit so much energy that won't be able to dissipate: in a closed cavity (his closed mouth) this resulted in a blast, so not the batteries but his mouth, exploded, literally, like a strong leak of gas into a closed room ignites even just from a extremely small spark, turning the room into a bomb. Never try this at home, ffs! There's a paper about this case (© National Journal of Maxillofacial Surgery) Blast injury face: An exemplified review of management (2013) |
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#19
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10-02-2014, 06:30 PM
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| My Rank: PRIVATE Poster Rank:7724 Join Date: Jul 2010 Posts: 24 Mentioned: 0 Post(s) Quoted: 4 Post(s)
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Re: Pencil Battery Short Circuited in Child's Mouth
No, those batteries have short-circuit currents <<10A. For the thing you describe, you need an impulse of many 1000Amps. Not even a 12V plumbum accumulator (as used in cars) could do that. You need:
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