11 ans de fabrication de piles au lithium

Exigences en matière d'emballage des batteries au lithium-ion : Guide de conformité pour l'expédition et le stockage des piles 18650 (2024)

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Mari Chen

Bonjour à tous, je suis Mari Chen, une créatrice de contenu qui a été profondément impliquée dans l'industrie des piles au lithium et la responsable du contenu de yungbang . Ici, je vous emmène dans le brouillard technique des piles au lithium - de l'innovation des matériaux en laboratoire à la sélection des piles pour le consommateur ; de la recherche et du développement de pointe sur les piles aux directives de sécurité pour l'utilisation quotidienne. Je veux être le "traducteur le plus compétent" entre vous et le monde des piles au lithium.

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Batteries lithium-ion 18650 conformes, emballées de manière professionnelle, avec une boîte et des étiquettes certifiées UN.

Overview: Why Lithium-Ion Battery Compliance Matters

Shipping and storing 18650 lithium-ion battery cells is highly regulated due to risks of fire, short circuits, and hazardous material incidents. Regulatory bodies such as PHMSA/DOT (USA), IATA (Air Transport)et UN38.3 set strict global standards. Non-compliance can result in shipment rejection, legal penalties, or catastrophic safety events.

Key Takeaway: Every step—from packaging choice to labeling and paperwork—must be precise, using only approved materials and workflows. This guide leverages the PHMSA 2024 official guide et IATA 2024/2025 regulations for validated compliance.


Quick Reference: Stepwise Compliance Flowchart

Complete these steps in order—each is mandatory:

  1. Confirm UN38.3 Pass/Test Summary
  2. Classify Your Shipment Type (Loose / With Equipment / In Equipment)
  3. Select Only UN-Certified Packaging
  4. Individually Insulate & Separate Each Cell
  5. Apply Shock, Antistatic, and Movement Protection
  6. Seal Outer Box & Affix All Regulatory Labels
  7. Correctly Mark with UN Number & IDs
  8. Complete Shipping Paperwork/Declarations
  9. Systematic Final Check (QA/Checklist)
  10. Store or Ship Under Approved Conditions

Download a printable checklist (FedEx official, 2025)


Step-by-Step Packaging & Compliance Guide

1. Preparation & Compliance Check

  • Ensure all 18650 cells have passed UN38.3 testing and possess a valid test summary document. Damaged or recalled cells have separate, stricter rules; generally forbidden for air shipment.
  • Time Estimate: 2–5 minutes (verification)

Why: UN38.3 compliance is legally required for any lithium-ion cell in commerce. Missing or incorrect documentation is the #1 reason for shipment rejection.

2. Shipment Classification

  • Identify if cells are (a) loose, (b) packed with equipment, or (c) packed in equipment.
    • Loose cells (UN3480): Most restrictive, state of charge (SoC) ≤30% for air.
    • With/In equipment (UN3481): Fewer restrictions, but still regulated.

Conseil : Misclassification results in regulatory penalties. If unsure, consult the IATA guidance document.

3. Choose UN-Certified Packaging

  • Use only packaging labeled with a visible UN certification (fiberboard, plywood, or metal designed specifically for lithium batteries).
  • Faire not reuse old boxes or modify containers; DIY packaging is non-compliant.
  • Certified supplier example (Creopack)

Time Estimate: 1–3 minutes (inspection)

Why: UN-certified packaging is drop, pressure, and crush tested. Non-compliant containers are the second most common failure point.

4. Cell Separation and Insulation

  • Individually separate each 18650 cell using non-conductive dividers, plastic trays, or sealed bags.
  • Insulate all terminals with plastic caps, shrink wrap, or electrical tape.
  • Avoid any metal-to-metal, cell-to-cell contact.

Tools: Plastic trays, ESD bags, foam, cell wrappers

Why: Short circuits are the biggest risk. Even one unprotected cell can cause thermal runaway.

5. Inner Packaging: Antistatic & Shock-Absorbing Material

  • Use foam, bubble wrap, or antistatic materials to fill space and prevent movement.
  • Ensure the pack absorbs shock/vibration in transport.
  • Add silica gel or desiccant if needed for humidity control.

Why: Reduces the risk of mechanical damage and ESD events, especially during transit mishandling.

6. Seal & Label the Outer Package

  • Close and tape the UN-certified outer box securely.
  • Affix:
    • UN3480 (loose) / UN3481 (with/in equipment) hazard labels
    • Class 9 hazard label (miscellaneous dangerous goods)
    • Mark with proper shipping name, UN number, shipper/consignee info, and emergency contact
    • No label should be damaged, incomplete, or missing
  • Label download/resources (Hazmateam)

Conseil : Pre-printed labels/templates help avoid last-minute mistakes.

7. Documentation: Paperwork for Shipping

  • Complete all required forms:
    • Shipper’s Declaration for Dangerous Goods (air/sea)
    • Safety Data Sheet (SDS)
    • UN38.3 Test Summary
    • Packing list (if required by carrier)
  • Double-check for errors—incorrect paperwork is a frequent cause of audit failure.
  • Download sample forms (Hazmateam Guide, pages 17–24)

Pro Tip: Most carriers provide their latest templates—check with their Dangerous Goods desk.

8. Final QA Checklist & Handover

Typical time for a compliant shipment: 20–35 minutes per batch (experienced staff).

9. Storage: Safe and Compliant Practices

  • Store in climate-controlled, well-ventilated areas, away from flammable materials, per 2024 US Chemical Storage best practices.
  • Use approved lithium battery storage cabinets and proper safety signage.
  • Segregate damaged/defective batteries and follow emergency protocols.

Troubleshooting: Common Audit Failures & How to Fix Them

ErrorConsequenceSolution / Fix
Non-UN-certified or reused packagingShipment rejection, finesAlways source packaging with visible UN-certification; never reuse.
Cells in contact/insufficient separationFire risk, audit failMandate individual separation/insulation for every cell.
Missing or damaged labelsShipment put on hold, penaltyUse and verify pre-printed, carrier-accepted labels.
Incomplete/inaccurate shipping paperworkRejected, returned, compliance fineDouble-check documents; use supplied templates.
Shipping damaged/defective batteries as normalMajor safety violationUse DOT-approved containers for damaged; ground shipping only.

Expert Tip: Conduct monthly ‘audit drills’ and update checklists per the latest DOT/IATA updates.


Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

Q: Can I ship 18650 batteries by air?
A: Only if they have passed UN38.3, state of charge ≤30%, and packaging/process is fully compliant with IATA 2024/2025 rules. Damaged/defective batteries are generally forbidden by air.

Q: What about international shipping differences?
A: Requirements are similar globally. Still, always verify with your carrier’s local Dangerous Goods team—some destinations add special paperwork or labeling.

Q: How do I handle damaged or defective batteries?
A: Use special DOT/UN-approved containment packaging and ship by ground only per DOT rules. Never ship by air.

Q: Do all carriers accept the same documents and formats?
A: Most accept official templates (see FedEx official checklist), but always confirm latest formats and labels before shipping.


Tools, Templates & Downloadable Resources

Pro Tip: Many compliance errors can be avoided by reviewing these resources before every shipment or training session.


References & Further Reading


Operator’s On-Screen Checklist (Copy/Paste Ready)

  • [ ] All 18650 cells passed UN38.3, no damage or recall
  • [ ] Shipment classification (loose/with/in equipment) confirmed
  • [ ] UN-certified packaging only (labeled)
  • [ ] All cells separated and terminals insulated
  • [ ] Antistatic and shock-absorption packed
  • [ ] Outer box sealed and all required labels applied
  • [ ] UN-number, shipper, consignee, and emergency contact marked
  • [ ] Complete paperwork (declaration, SDS, test summary) attached
  • [ ] Storage plan set: climate, segregation, and signage
  • [ ] Final QA check and 2-person verification done

Summary: Packaging and shipping 18650 lithium-ion cells in compliance with 2024 standards is detail-intensive—but entirely reproducible and safe if you use only UN-certified materials, follow this checklist, and stay up-to-date with regulatory changes. For all shipments, always coordinate with your carrier’s Dangerous Goods desk, and make continuous training and process audits your best line of defense.