% I marked this as OT as it is not directly EV related. During both
departing and when returning  my recent flight, the attendants in the
waiting area annouced over the PA that anyone with the above phones were to
see them (meaning those batteries were a serious problem). While this news
item is mainly focused on phone batteries, they just had to throw in that
batteries are used in EVs.

? 'as EVs struggle to go 350mi' ?
? 'Batteries should never be left constantly plugged in' ?
%

https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2016/oct/10/samsung-how-batteries-work-smartphones-explode
Charged issue: how batteries work – and why some of them explode
10 October 2016  Samuel Gibbs

[images  
https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/cc0aecbf7f8524f97c6485b3a129fd6b565ec567/0_127_3888_2334/master/3888.jpg?w=620&q=55&auto=format&usm=12&fit=max&s=5a1f37b2d94e19b5ffe562165c462484
Battery exploding out of a 17in MacBook Pro battery casing due to swelling.
Photograph: J Aaron Farr/Flickr

https://i.guim.co.uk/img/media/f64c085123e3898e4353e975df17be0a2ac3374c/0_0_3500_785/master/3500.jpg?w=620&q=55&auto=format&usm=12&fit=max&s=11dd5e15333bef31ef0bb0213c3c8ac7
A combination photo shows a Samsung Note 7 exploding as pressure is applied
to its fully charged battery during a test at the Applied Energy Hub battery
laboratory in Singapore, 6 October. Photograph: Edgar Su/Reuters
]

[image]  enloop rechargeable batteries  We rely on batteries to keep our
modern lives powered up. How can we make them safer and longer lasting?
Photograph: Pete Slater/Flickr

Batteries fuel modern life, from smartphones to electric cars. But how do
they store electricity and why don’t they last long enough? And, as Samsung
might be asking itself, why do they blow up?

Battery life is an explosive issue. Literally, as Samsung is discovering to
its dismay. The company’s Galaxy Note 7 smartphone was praised upon release
for best-in-class battery life, far outpacing its key competitor, the
iPhones 6S and 7 Plus. Then it started blowing up. Samsung issued a recall
and replace programme, and the replacements also started blowing up, forcing
the company to suspend production entirely.

The affair marks the latest road block on the long fight to improve the
batteries that power our electronics. While processing speed doubles around
every 18 months, battery capacity takes almost a decade to improve to the
same degree. That gap is starting to cause problems, but as Samsung has
found to its cost, it’s not easy to fix.

A smartphone often lasts less than a day, a laptop sometimes only a few
hours and an electric car struggles to go 350 miles. So why is it that
battery life is still such a problem – and when are we going to fix it?

What is a battery?
[image]  Inside that plastic and metal casing is a little box of chemicals
ready to react and create electricity. Photograph: BitchBuzz/Flickr

Batteries are small containers of chemical energy. When a smartphone is
plugged into the mains, electricity is used to reset a chemical reaction
within the battery, transferring electrons from the negative anode to the
cathode – the positive end of the battery.

Once charged, the battery can then create electricity by driving electrons
through a circuit, in this case a smartphone, to the anode and will continue
to do so until all of the electrons contained within the battery have
transferred to the anode or a built-in switch disconnects the battery.

What is a battery made of?
Inside a typical battery you have an anode, a cathode and electrolyte –
something for the positive ions to travel through.

Lithium-ion batteries found in most smartphones and electronics have a metal
oxide cathode made of a cobalt, nickel, manganese or iron mix, a porous
graphite anode that holds lithium ions within it and a lithium salt
electrolyte.

Positively charged lithium ions travel through the electrolyte from the
anode to the cathode driving electrons through the smartphone as required
and back to the anode.

Why doesn’t it last long enough?
[image]  Low battery symbol on the Nokia Lumia 800 in a jeans pocket.
Photograph: Martin Abegglen/Flickr

The principle of the battery may be simple, but the chemistry and technology
to make it work is not. The major limiting factor for batteries is their
energy density.

A battery can only generate as much electricity as its chemical components
can store energy. Everything that is not the active material within the
battery is effectively dead weight, including the casing, the controller
chips, the wires to carry the current out – they all add weight but not
power.

A typical lithium ion battery within a smartphone has an energy density
around 150 Watt-hours per kilogram (Wh/kg). While Lithium ion battery energy
density has improved since its introduction in the early 1990s, it is held
back by its construction and chemistry.

The only way to immediately increase a smartphone’s battery life with
current technology is to increase the power efficiency of the smartphone’s
electronics and increase the size of the battery – but thinner and thinner
smartphones demand thinner and thinner batteries.

Why does battery life diminish?
[image]  macbook pro battery meter  Fully charged, or is it? Over time the
battery can’t store as much energy as when new. Photograph: Bastian
Greshake/Flickr

Battery life doesn’t stay constant for the entire life of a smartphone – it
diminishes slowly over time, as the battery is discharged and recharged.

This is because the chemical reaction that produces the electricity causes
thin layers of lithium to be laid down on the electrodes, which reduces the
amount available to generate electricity and increases the internal
resistance of the battery.

The higher the resistance the harder the battery has to work to maintain a
usable voltage and so the amount of power it can produce per charge
decreases. You might remember this bit from school:

Voltage = Current x Resistance (V=IR)

Why do some batteries explode?
[image]  swelled macbook pro battery  Battery exploding out of a 17in
MacBook Pro battery casing due to swelling. Photograph: J Aaron Farr/Flickr

Batteries with much higher energy density than lithium-based cells are
already available, but they aren’t safe enough for use in portable
electronics.

“The more energy you put into a box, the more dangerous it’s going to be,”
says Dr Billy Wu, lecturer at Imperial College London’s Dyson School of
Design Engineering. “Safety is absolutely key and thermal management is
crucial. If a battery heats up beyond 80C you hit what is called thermal
runaway, where the components start to decompose, and that’s when it can
explode.”

The specific cause of Samsung’s issues with exploding batteries is unknown,
the company just cites “a battery cell issue”.

What happens next?
[image]  A rechargeable lithium-ion battery  We’re stuck with the
rechargeable lithium-ion battery for the time being. Photograph:
Razor512/Flickr

In the immediate term, battery advances will come by bringing existing
lithium-ion technologies closer to their theoretical limits, which will
increase the power density of batteries.

A typical lithium-ion battery using lithium manganese oxide has a
theoretical power density of 280 Wh/kg, but the final product only has
150Wh/kg so there is certainly room for improvement.

“It’s about optimising the structure within the battery,” says Wu. “If you
imagine inside your battery you have this porous structure full of the
active material.”

“For higher power output, you need a more porous structure to increase the
surface area and allow more lithium ions through at any one time, but
because it’s got more holes it holds less active material, which in turn
gives you lower capacity.”

New, advanced battery chemistries such as lithium-sulphur and
lithium-silicon are also being worked on, with companies around the UK
currently developing the technology.

What is the future of battery technology?
Solid state batteries are one possible future, where the liquid electrolyte
in the battery is replaced by a solid substance, which will provide
significant safety improvements.

“The main advantage of solid state batteries is that you can go back to
using lithium as the anode material, which has really good power and energy
density, but wasn’t safe with liquid electrolytes,” explains Wu.

Solid-state batteries will remove the need for the porous carbon anode and
therefore removes more of the weight from the battery that doesn’t
contribute to generating power.

Metal air batteries, using zinc, lithium or aluminium are also on the
horizon, but are 20 years away from being available in a commercial
application according to Wu.

What can I do to help my battery last longer?
[image]  low power warning on a samsung tabpro s  A familiar sight for
anyone with a smartphone, tablet or computer. Photograph: Samuel Gibbs for
the Guardian

There are a few things you can do to help prolong the life of your battery.
The nature of the chemical reaction inside the battery means that it has to
work harder in the last 20% of discharge and above 80% of charging.

Keeping a lithium ion battery roughly between 80% and 20% of charge will
help it keep a greater amount of its capacity for longer. Smart power
management systems are currently being developed that do just that when
plugged into a wall overnight.

Batteries should never be left constantly plugged in, which is particularly
applicable to laptops. They are kept in better working order if they are
discharged and recharged every so often. Once a month should do it.
[© 2016 Guardian News and Media]




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