Again..... I do not know to much about aircraft slides or inflatable rafts. I have to guess that the standard inert gas used is nitrogen for the bottle.
From
AeroSavvy
.....
- Dry nitrogen contains no water vapor. The lack of moisture reduces tire pressure variations at temperature extremes (water density varies significantly at different temperatures). With the effects of moisture eliminated, change in tire pressure due to temperature is linear and predictable.
There is no electrical circuit to a plug. The plug reacts to heat. If a bottle (or tire) has to much internal/external heat, the plug will melt and the gas pressure inside will be released to atmosphere.
I worked in Houston for several decades. It was not uncommon in the summertime to have an aircraft pull into the gate with hot brakes. Some of that heat is transferred to the wheel. If a tire "thermaled" you could hear a hissing as you did your walk-around. That was the internal tire pressure being released. It did require a tire change, but that is a minimal task compared to a tire blowing up. Large aircraft use "split rims". If the bolts holding the halves together fail, you now have two flying projectiles that don't care what or who they hit. I "never" spent time standing next to the broadside of a hot tire. You always look at it from the ends.
This
is the result of thermaled tires.