What is causing lithium-ion laptop batteries to overheat or catch fire? Is 
my battery at risk?

In conjunction with the
United States Consumer Product Safety Commission
(CPSC), Dell and Apple Computer announced large recalls of laptop batteries 
in the summer of 2006, followed by Toshiba and Lenovo. Sony manufactured all
of the recalled batteries, and in October 2006, the company announced its 
own large-scale recall. Under the right circumstances, these batteries could
overheat, potentially causing burns, an explosion or a fire.

To understand what's going on, it's helpful to know a little bit about how 
batteries work. Batteries have a negatively charged terminal and a 
positively
charged terminal. In a battery, energy from electrochemical reactions causes 
electrons (negatively charged particles) to collect at the battery's 
negatively
charged pole. Charged particles are attracted to opposite charge, so if you 
connect a battery to a circuit, the electrons will flow from the negative 
pole,
through the circuit and to the battery's positively charged pole. In other 
words, the battery generates a moving charge, or electricity.
The exact reaction that generates the electrons varies, depending on the 
type of battery. In a lithium-ion battery, you'll find pressurized 
containers that
house a coil of metal and a flammable, lithium-containing liquid. The 
manufacturing process creates tiny pieces of metal that float in the liquid. 
Manufacturers
can't completely prevent these metal fragments, but good manufacturing 
techniques limit their size and number. The cells of a lithium-ion battery 
also
contain separators that keep the anodes and cathodes, or positive and 
negative poles, from touching each other.

If the battery gets hot through use or recharging, the pieces of metal can 
move around, much like grains of rice in a pot of water. If a piece of metal
gets too close to the separator, it can puncture the separator and cause a 
short circuit. There are a few possible scenarios for what can go wrong in 
the
case of a short circuit:
. If it creates a spark, the flammable liquid can ignite, causing a fire.
. If it causes the temperature inside the battery to rise rapidly, the 
battery can explode due to the increased pressure.
. If it causes the temperature to rise slowly, the battery can melt, and the 
liquid inside can leak out.
There are several reasons why multiple laptop battery models have been 
recalled in the past few years. People want small, lightweight laptops that 
they
can use for long periods. They also want their laptops to have bright 
screens and lots of processing power. For these reasons, laptop batteries 
have to
be relatively small, but they also have to hold a lot of energy and last a 
long time.

Making lithium-ion batteries that can hold more power for a longer period 
requires vital components, including the separators, to be small and thin. 
The
reduction in size makes it more likely that the batteries can fail, break, 
leak or short circuit.

Lithium-Ion Batteries and Electric Cars
In addition to laptops and other electronic devices, lithium-ion batteries 
are used in electric cars. However, these batteries are less likely to catch
fire due to numerous safety precautions, including cooling and automatic 
shutdown systems.


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