How is a battery made?

Background

Benjamin Franklin's famous experiment to attract electricity by flying a
kite
in a lightning storm was only one of many late eighteenth- and early 
nineteenth-century experiments conducted to learn about electricity. The 
first battery
was constructed in 1800 by Italian Alessandro Volta. The so-called voltaic 
pile consisted of alternating discs of silver and
zinc
separated by leather or
pasteboard
that had been
soaked
in salt water,
lye,
or some
alkaline
solution. Strips of metal at each end of the pile were connected to small 
cups filled with mercury. When Volta touched both cups of mercury with his 
fingers,
he received an electric shock; the more discs he assembled, the greater the
jolt
he received.

Volta's discovery led to further experimentation. In 1813, Sir Humphrey Davy 
constructed a pile with 2,000 pairs of discs in the basement of the Royal 
Institution
of London. Among other applications, Davy used the electricity he produced 
for electrolysis-
catalyzing
chemical reactions by passing a current through substances (Davy separated 
sodium and potassium from compounds). Only a few years later, Michael 
Faraday
discovered the principle of electromagnetic induction, using a magnet to 
induce electricity in a coiled wire. This technique is at the heart of the 
dynamos
used to produce electricity in power plants today. (While a dynamo produces 
alternating current (AC) in which the flow of electricity shifts direction
regularly, batteries produce direct current (DC) that flows in one direction 
only.) A lead-acid cell capable of producing a very large amount of current,
the
forerunner
of today's
automobile
battery, was devised in 1859 by Frenchman Gaston Planté.

In the United States, Thomas Edison was experimenting with electricity from 
both batteries and dynamos to power the
light bulb,
which began to spread in the United States in the early 1880s. During the 
1860s, Georges Leclanché invented the wet cell, which, though heavy because 
of
its liquid components, could be sold and used commercially. By the 1870s and 
1880s, the Leclanché cell was being produced using dry materials and was 
used
for a number of tasks, including providing power for Alexander Graham Bell's 
telephone and for the newly-invented
flashlight.
Batteries were subsequently called upon to provide power for many other 
inventions, such as the radio, which became hugely popular in the years 
following
World War I. Today, more than twenty
billion
power cells are sold throughout the world each year, and each American uses 
approximately 27 batteries annually.

Design

All batteries utilize similar procedures to create electricity; however, 
variations in materials and construction have produced different types of 
batteries.
Strictly speaking, what is commonly termed a battery is actually a group of 
linked cells. The following is a simplified description of how a battery 
works.

Two important parts of any cell are the
anode
and the
cathode.
The cathode is a metal that is combined, naturally or in the laboratory, 
with oxygen-the combination is called an oxide. Iron oxide (
rust),
although too fragile to use in a battery, is perhaps the most familiar
oxide.
Some other oxides are actually strong enough to be worked (cut, bent, 
shaped,
molded,
and so on) and used in a cell. The anode is a metal that would
oxidize
if it were allowed to and, other things being equal, is more likely to 
oxidize than the metal that forms part of the cathode.

A cell produces electricity when one end of a cathode and one end of an 
anode are placed into a third substance that can conduct electricity, while 
their
other ends are connected. The anode draws oxygen atoms toward it, thereby 
creating an electric flow. If there is a switch in the circuit (similar to 
any
wall or lamp switch), the circuit is not complete and electricity cannot 
flow unless the switch is in the closed position. If, in addition to the 
switch,
there is something else in the circuit, such as a light
bulb,
the bulb will light from the friction of the electrons moving through it.

The third substance into which the anode and the cathode are placed is 
called an electrolyte. In many cases this material is a chemical combination 
that
has the property of being alkaline. Thus, an alkaline battery is one that 
makes use of an alkaline
electrolyte.
A cell will not produce electricity by itself unless it is placed in a 
circuit that has been rendered complete by a simple switch, or by some other 
switching
connection in the
appliance
using the battery.

Designing a cell can lead to many variations in type and structure. Not all 
electrolytes, for example, are alkaline. Additionally, the container for the
electrolyte can act as both a container and either the cathode or the anode. 
Some cells draw their oxygen not from a cathode but right out of the air.
Changes in the compositions of the anode and the cathode will provide more 
or less electricity. Precise adjustment of all of the materials used in a 
cell
can affect the amount of electricity that can be produced, the rate of 
production, the voltage at which electricity is delivered through the 
lifetime of
the cell, and the cell's ability to function at different temperatures.

All of these possibilities do, in fact, exist, and their various 
applications have produced the many different types of batteries available 
today (
lithium,
mercury, and so on). For years, however, the most common cell has been the 
1.5
volt
alkaline battery.

Different batteries function better in different circumstances. The alkaline 
1.5 volt cell is ideal for photographic equipment, handheld computers and 
calculators,
toys, tape recorders, and other "high drain" uses; it is also good in low 
temperatures. This cell has a sloping discharge characteristic-it loses 
power
gradually, rather than ceasing to produce electricity suddenly-and will lose 
perhaps four percent of its power per year if left
unused
on a shelf.

Other types of batteries include a lithium/manganese
dioxide
battery, which has a flat discharge characteristic-it provides approximately 
the same amount of power at the beginning of its life as at the end-and can
be used where there is a need for small, high-power batteries (smoke alarms, 
cameras, memory backups on computers, and so on). Hearing aids, pagers, and
some other types of medical equipment frequently use
zinc air
button type batteries, which provide a high energy density on continuous 
discharge. A mercury battery is frequently used in many of the same 
applications
as the zinc air battery, because it, too, provides a steady output voltage.

Raw Materials

This section, as well as the following section, will focus on alkaline 
batteries. In an alkaline battery, the cylinder that contains the cells is 
made of
nickel-plated steel. It is lined with a separator that divides the cathode 
from the anode and is made of either layered paper or a
porous
synthetic material. The canister is sealed at one end with an
asphalt
or
epoxy
sealant that underlies a steel plate, and at the other with a brass
nail
driven through the cylinder. This nail is welded to a metal end cap and 
passed through an exterior plastic seal. Inside the cylinder, the cathode 
consists
of a mixture of
manganese dioxide,
graphite,
and a
potassium hydroxide
solution; the anode comprises zinc powder and a potassium
hydroxide
electrolyte.

The Manufacturing
Process

The cathode
. In an alkaline battery, the cathode actually doubles as part of the 
container. Huge loads of the constituent ingredients-
manganese
dioxide, carbon black (graphite), and an electrolyte (potassium hydroxide in 
solution)-are delivered by train and mixed in very large batches at the 
production
site. The mixture is then granulated and pressed or compacted into hollow 
cylinders called preforms. Depending on the size of the battery being made, 
several
preforms may be stacked one on top of another in a battery. Alternatively, 
the series of preforms can be replaced by an
extruded
ring of the same material.
. The preforms are next inserted into a nickel-plated steel can; the 
combination of the preforms and the steel can make up the cathode of the 
battery. In
a large operation, the cans are made at the battery factory using standard 
cutting and forming techniques. An indentation is made near the top of the 
can,
and an asphalt or epoxy
sealant
is placed above the
indentation
to protect against
leakage.

The separator
. A paper separator soaked in the electrolyte solution is then inserted 
inside the can against the preforms; the separator is made from several 
pieces of
paper laid at crossgrains to each other (like
plywood).
Looking down at an open can, one would see what looks like a paper cup 
inserted into the can. The separator keeps the cathode material from coming 
into
contact with the anode material. As an alternative, a manufacturer might use 
a porous synthetic fiber for the same purpose.

The anode
. The anode goes into the battery can next. It is a
gel
composed primarily of zinc powder, along with other materials including a 
potassium hydroxide electrolyte. This gel has the consistency of a very 
thick
paste. Rather than a solution, it is chemically a suspension, in which 
particles do not settle (though an appropriate filter could separate them). 
The
gel does not fill the can to the top so as to allow space for the chemical 
reactions that will occur once the battery is put into use.

The seals
. Though the battery is able to produce electricity at this point, an open 
cell is not practical and would
exhaust
its potential rapidly. The battery needs to be sealed with three connected 
components. The first, a brass "nail" or long spike, is inserted into the 
middle
of the can, through the gel material and serves as a "current collector." 
The second is a plastic seal and the third a metal end cap. The nail, which 
extends
about two-thirds of the way into the can, is welded to the metal end cap and 
then passed through the plastic seal.
. This seal is significantly thinner in some places than in others, so that 
if too much gas builds up in the can, the seal will rupture rather than the
entire battery. Some battery designs make use of a wax-filled hole in the 
plastic; excess gas pushes through the wax rather than
rupturing
the battery. The seal assembly meets the indentation made in the can at the 
beginning of the process and is crimped in place.
. The opposite end of the can (the positive end of the battery) is then 
closed with a steel plate that is either welded in place or glued with an 
epoxy-type
cement.

The label
. Before the battery leaves the factory, a label is added identifying the 
type of battery, its size, and other information. The label is often paper 
that
is simply glued to the battery. One large manufacturer has its label design 
printed on plastic
shrink wrap:
a loose fitting piece of heat-sensitive plastic is wrapped around the 
battery can and then exposed to a blast of heat that makes the plastic 
shrink down
to fit tightly around the can.

Quality Control

Because battery technology is not especially new or exotic, quality control 
and its results are especially important as the basis for brand competition.
The ability of a battery to resist
corrosion,
to operate well under a variety of conditions, to maintain a good shelf and 
usage life, and other factors, are the direct results of quality control. 
Batteries
and ingredients are inspected and tested at almost all stages of the 
production process, and the completed batches are subjected to
stringent
tests.

Environmental Issues

Although making batteries does present some environmental obstacles, none 
are
insurmountable.
Zinc and manganese, the major chemicals in alkaline batteries, do not pose 
environmental difficulties, and both are considered safe by the Food and 
Drug
Administration (FDA). The major potential pollutant in batteries is mercury, 
which commonly accompanies zinc and which was for many years added to 
alkaline
batteries to aid conductivity and to prevent corrosion. In the mid-1980s, 
alkaline batteries commonly contained between five and seven percent 
mercury.

When it became apparent several years ago that mercury was an environmental 
hazard, manufacturers began seeking ways to produce efficient batteries 
without
it. The primary method of doing this focuses on better purity control of 
ingredients. Today's alkaline batteries may contain approximately .025 
percent
mercury. Batteries with no added mercury at all (it is a naturally occurring 
element, so it would be difficult to guarantee a product free of even trace
qualities) are available from some manufacturers

Batteries are currently the focus of intense investigation by scientists and 
engineers around the world. The reason is simple: several key innovations 
depend
on the creation of better batteries. Viable electric automobiles and 
portable electronic devices that can operate for long periods of time 
without needing
to be recharged must wait until more lightweight and more powerful batteries 
are developed. Typical lead-acid batteries currently used in automobiles,
for instance, are too
bulky
and cannot store enough electricity to be used in electric automobiles. 
Lithium batteries, while lightweight and powerful, are prone to leaking and 
catching
fire.

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