+1 What Morgan said, if the battery is defective and you somehow managed to get it to zero volts. You are playing woth fire LITERALLY by trying to resurrect it and expect it to be viable / safe.
A LiPO is a nasty beast with a ton of power density. The Ferric chemistries you see in the home batteries, the solar storage, the solar walls, are a different world. They are much more forgiving when you abuse them, and a LOT L O T less likely to ignite when abused. Because of the way the LiPO's work, they create crystalline tendrils inside the cells that like to grow and short across the plates. Once that happens, you get a ton of heat as that cell that just shorted expends it's load thru that short. Things melt, things burn, this causes a HUGE short now.
They will hiss, and then flame, because one of the byproducts of that is Hydrogen gas, which you just heated to hundreds of degrees and are throwing sparks at it from an internally shorting battery. The rest of the batteries in the circuit will now want to dump their load into that dead cell since it's a strong current pathway, not to mention the 1700 degrees plus that thing will burn at once ignited, the heat transfers to the pouches next to it, they melt, they short, and they sympathetically deflagrate. Thermal runaway happens fast.
Please be VERY careful if you genuinely have to rezz a totally dead LiPo. Sometimes it isn't worth it
aaron