Early detection of fire-related risks in lithium-ion batteries (LIBs) remains a critical challenge, as conventional protection mechanisms typically activate only after irreversible degradation or macroscopic failure occurs. In this study, an innovative sensor-based diagnostic framework is proposed for proactive fire prediction in LIBs by simultaneously monitoring low-frequency and high-frequency electrical signatures generated during battery charge–discharge processes. An electromagnetic (EM) antenna sensor and a high-frequency current transformer (HFCT) sensor were employed to capture complementary voltage- and current-based transient signals associated with internal degradation phenomena. Cell-level experiments were conducted under various C-rates and temperature conditions, including high-stress environments, while module-level validation was performed on a 4-series, 1-parallel (4S1P) configuration at a 2C-rate under ambient temperature. Time–frequency characteristics of the measured signals were systematically evaluated using MATLAB-based continuous wavelet transform (CWT) and discrete wavelet transform (DWT) techniques. The results reveal that degradation-induced transient events exhibit non-stationary, impulsive voltage and current signatures with distinct frequency-band localization, which intensify with increasing C-rate, elevated temperature, and aging progression. At the module level, although signal amplitudes were partially attenuated due to current redistribution, characteristic wavelet energy patterns and time–frequency concentrations remained clearly distinguishable, demonstrating the scalability of the proposed approach. The combined EM antenna–HFCT sensing strategy, together with multi-resolution wavelet analysis, enables effective phenomenological differentiation between normal operational noise and incipient internal fault signatures well before conventional thermal or capacity-based indicators become evident. These findings demonstrate feasibility of the proposed method for early-stage fault diagnosis and highlight its potential applicability to advanced battery management systems for proactive fire prevention in large-scale energy storage and electric vehicle applications. Unlike conventional voltage-, temperature-, or gas-based diagnostics, the proposed approach enables the detection of incipient degradation phenomena at the microsecond scale by exploiting complementary low- and high-frequency electrical signatures. This study provides experimental evidence that wavelet-based EM and HFCT sensing can identify MISC-related precursors significantly earlier than conventional battery management indicators.
Jin et al. (Fri,) studied this question.