Nice to know: Your smartphone knows when its battery is fully charged. |
Myths About Smartphone Batteries
3
Myths About Smartphone Batteries That Need to Die
BY
DAVE ROOS
There's nothing like taking a new smartphone out of the box and reveling in how long you can use it between charges.
But after a year or so, that battery life
starts to dwindle. What's causing it? We debunk some popular myths about
prolonging battery life.
Myth 1: Plugging
Overnight Is Bad for the Battery
You've probably had a friend — or even the
smartphone salesperson — tell you it's bad for the battery to leave the device
plugged in overnight.
But on the other hand, who wants to wake up
at 3 a.m. to unplug their phone?
Relax, my friend. Your phone's battery is smarter
than you think.
When you plug in your smartphone at night,
the lithium-ion battery begins to slowly recharge until it is full or
"saturated" at 4.1 volts.
"Then it turns
off,"
says Isidor Buchmann, founder and CEO of Cadex Electronics and the creator of
the educational website Battery University.
"It's as if it
were on the shelf and not connected at all."
So, if the charger is functioning correctly,
it's impossible to "overcharge" your phone's battery beyond its limit
of 4.1 volts.
But is it bad for the battery to be fully
charged for long periods? That depends on what you expect out of a phone
battery.
"If somebody
wants to keep a battery forever, then you could call it 'overcharging,'" says Bachmann.
"But with a
consumer product like a smartphone, people don't care about battery life. In
two to three years the glass breaks and you buy a new one and the old battery
still has some life in it."
Technologies with longer lifespans, like
satellites and electric cars, are a different story.
In that case, engineers must take special
precautions to extend the life of lithium-ion batteries.
The rechargeable batteries in electric cars,
for example, don't charge to 100 percent full capacity or drain all the way to
zero.
"They work in
the middle where the battery would have the least amount of stress over
time,"
says Bachmann.
So, you don't need to wake up at night and
unplug your fully charged phone.
The whole point of charging a smartphone is
to maximize the amount of time you can use it before plugging it back in.
You want it at a 100 percent in the morning
so that it lasts all (or most of) the day.
Myth 2: Let the
Battery Run Down Between Charges
Nope, it's better to plug your phone in at
intervals throughout the day than to let the battery run completely down before
recharging.
Forty to 80 percent capacity is the sweet
spot.
As it says on the
Battery University website, "Similar to a mechanical device that wears
out faster with heavy use, the depth of discharge (DoD) determines the cycle
count of the battery. The smaller the discharge (low DoD), the longer the
battery will last. If at all possible, avoid full discharges and charge the
battery more often between uses."
(The DoD refers to how much energy a battery
has delivered. In a fully charged battery, DoD is 0 percent; in a 70 percent
charged battery, it's 30 percent).
However, once every three months, a battery
should be calibrated by letting it run down until the "low battery"
light appears and recharging fully.
Myth 3: Don't Worry About Heat
Actually, heat is a much bigger threat to
battery longevity than your charging practices.
Leaving your phone on a sunny windowsill or the
dashboard of your car is a guaranteed way to drain its capacity.
"It's like a
carton of milk,"
says Bachmann, who literally wrote the book on rechargeable batteries.
"If it's kept
out of the fridge it doesn't last as long. With a lithium-ion battery, it's
corrosion that sets in and deteriorates the battery."
Interestingly, the combination of excessive
heat and a full charge can be problematic if you're storing a lithium-ion
battery for a long time between uses.
Battery University ran tests on lithium-ion
batteries stored for a full year at different temperatures.
A battery stored at 100 percent charge at 40
degrees C (104 degrees F) will lose 35 percent of its total capacity over a
year.
Under the same conditions, a battery stored with only a 40 percent initial charge will lose just 15 percent of its capacity after three months.
That's why folks in the battery industry
store and ship batteries under controlled temperatures and never at full
charge.
Again, does that mean you should keep your
smartphone in the fridge overnight?
No, that would be crazy, unless you don't
plan to use it for a year or you just like the feel of a cool iPhone in the
morning.
And Remember ...
A certain degree of capacity loss is
inevitable with all lithium-ion batteries, Bachmann explains, and no single
factor — fully charging, fully depleting, too many cycles, too much heat — will
run your battery into the ground.
But all of these together will definitely
take their toll. The good news is that your kid will drop the phone in the
toilet long before the battery burns out.
NOW THAT'S USEFUL
A real cause of battery drainage are all those apps you download to your phone. Techlicious has some tips on dealing with that issue.
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