Why charging phones overnight is a bad idea….
To know the answer to that question, we need to know a little
more about the personalities of a Lithium Ion or Lithium Polymer battery. These
are the same exact types of batteries commonly found in your mobile phones.
How to make the batteries last longer per charge? How to
prolong their lifespan? How to prevent having batteries explode in my face?
These are important questions to me and I’ve spent lots of time digging.
While the internet is a convenient tool, there are simply
too many misconceptions about your smartphone batteries floating around on the
internet. No thanks to the fact that Lithium Ion/Polymer batteries behave very
differently from their predecessors, the Nickel metal hydride batteries that
have graced the phones of yesterday years. If you have a Nokia 3310, the
battery inside is a Nickel metal hydride (NiMH).
View photos
More
Because many people don’t really know the differences
between the older battery types, they ended up giving battery advice that
really harm your Lithium Ion (Li-ion)/Polymer(LiPo) batteries (I shall
collectively refer to these as ‘Li’).
View photos
Li_ion_laptop_battery (Small)
More
Bad advice are plentiful. Charge your phone for 6 hours
before using? Only charge your battery when it is close to empty? These are
just some of the advice that were perfect for NiMH batteries but will cause
your Li batteries to suffer a slow, horrible death.
Back to the topic at hand. Should you charge your phone
overnight? To answer that, let’s look at my handy summary of Li battery
characteristics:
· Li batteries are afraid of
heat. The higher the temperature, the faster it loses capacity over time.
· Li batteries are afraid of
being empty. The emptier it is, the faster it loses capacity over time.
· Li batteries are afraid of
being full. The fuller it is, the faster it loses capacity over time.
· Li batteries are afraid of
being overcharged (charged more than full) or short circuited. If it gets
charged too much, it gets bloated due to chemical reactions in the cell.
· Li batteries are afraid of
being over-discharged (use more energy than the battery is willing to
give). If it gets discharged too much, it gets bloated due to chemical
reactions in the cell.
· Li batteries are afraid of
being ruptured. If the internals are exposed to air, it catches fire and burn.
· Li batteries keep the scores
well. If you charge from 50% to 100% twice, that is considered one charge
cycle, not 2.
Expecting more? Nope, that’s all you need to know.
So overnight charging. Is it good or bad?
Let’s talk about safety first. Overnight charging is
generally safe as long as your battery, charger and mobile phone are all from
reputable manufacturers. Badly manufactured chargers and mobile phones may have
overcharge protection circuit that fails, cause your battery to get over
charged. When you battery gets overcharged, the internal cell undergoes a
chemical reaction, and the battery start to bloat.
View photos
iphone-3gs-battery-balloon-450x284
More
If the bloat is too much, the battery ruptures, causing
the internals to be exposed to air, resulting in fire and explosion.
View photos
samsung-rogue-corey
More
While this is still O.K. if you are around and can swiftly
put out the fire or prevent the fire from spreading, leaving your smart phone
to charge unattended isn’t safe. Your whole house would have burnt to the ground while you
sleep.
If you are using batteries, chargers and mobile phones
from reputable brand, maybe you can risk it by charging your devices
unattended. But know that accidents have happened before. If you are using
third party batteries (e.g. iPhone with battery replaced by OEM versions),
cheap china chargers or phones, please, never, never risk it.
Does overnight charging harm your smartphone battery?
Actually yes. As mentioned above, keeping the battery at full or close to full
charge state actually makes your battery lose capacity faster. Imagine having a
100% charge state for 1/3 of a day, every single day. That wears out your
battery much faster. There may be increased battery wear due to the charger
constantly topping up your phone to maintain 100% charge. On the other
hand, be consoled that chargers, if functioning properly, will automatically
step down and stop the charging once your phone battery reaches 100%. This means
that no excessive heat that is harmful to your battery is produced.
In conclusion, charging of Li batteries always come with a
small risk of fire. However, such risks can be mitigated if you only use
batteries, chargers and phones from reputable manufacturers. At the same time,
leaving the phone or in fact, any other such gadgets to charge unattended is a
bad idea because you may not have time to contain the fire if indeed an
accident did happen. Overnight charging also harms your battery, decreasing its
lifespan and resulting in an earlier need for battery replacement.
Sharing is caring. Let your friends know this important
bit of information.
—
The same information discussed here applies to all other
gadgets that uses the same battery type. Heard stories of hoverboard exploding?
That is because the structure of the hoverboard cracked, resulting in rupture
of battery and hence explosion. Mobile phones exploding while in pocket? Due to
short circuit, bloated battery, rupture, explosion.
Everything that happens are related to the few bullet
points highlighted above.
—
You can also use the information above to prolong the
lifespan of your battery, to ensure the longevity of your gadgets. Keep your
battery charge close to the halfway mark as frequently as possible. If you are
storing your gadget because you will not be using it for the next few months,
charge to about 60-70% charge before storing them to ensure that the battery
don’t die. Don’t place your gadgets or batteries in warm or hot areas. The list
goes on.
Why charging phones overnight is a bad idea….
To know the answer to that question, we need to know a little
more about the personalities of a Lithium Ion or Lithium Polymer
battery. These are the same exact types of batteries commonly found in
your mobile phones.
How to make the batteries last longer per charge? How to
prolong their lifespan? How to prevent having batteries explode in my face?
These are important questions to me and I’ve spent lots of time digging.
While the internet is a convenient tool, there are simply
too many misconceptions about your smartphone batteries floating around on the
internet. No thanks to the fact that Lithium Ion/Polymer batteries behave very
differently from their predecessors, the Nickel metal hydride batteries that
have graced the phones of yesterday years. If you have a Nokia 3310, the
battery inside is a Nickel metal hydride (NiMH).
View photos
9020f717-04a6-434c-b49f-d7e06d136353
More
Because many people don’t really know the differences
between the older battery types, they ended up giving battery advice that
really harm your Lithium Ion (Li-ion)/Polymer(LiPo) batteries (I shall
collectively refer to these as ‘Li’).
View photos
Li_ion_laptop_battery (Small)
More
Bad advice are plentiful. Charge your phone for 6 hours
before using? Only charge your battery when it is close to empty? These are
just some of the advice that were perfect for NiMH batteries but will cause
your Li batteries to suffer a slow, horrible death.
Back to the topic at hand. Should you charge your phone
overnight? To answer that, let’s look at my handy summary of Li battery
characteristics:
· Li batteries are afraid of
heat. The higher the temperature, the faster it loses capacity over time.
· Li batteries are afraid of
being empty. The emptier it is, the faster it loses capacity over time.
· Li batteries are afraid of
being full. The fuller it is, the faster it loses capacity over time.
· Li batteries are afraid of
being overcharged (charged more than full) or short circuited. If it gets
charged too much, it gets bloated due to chemical reactions in the cell.
· Li batteries are afraid of
being over-discharged (use more energy than the battery is willing to
give). If it gets discharged too much, it gets bloated due to chemical
reactions in the cell.
· Li batteries are afraid of
being ruptured. If the internals are exposed to air, it catches fire and burn.
· Li batteries keep the scores
well. If you charge from 50% to 100% twice, that is considered one charge
cycle, not 2.
Expecting more? Nope, that’s all you need to know.
So overnight charging. Is it good or bad?
Let’s talk about safety first. Overnight charging is
generally safe as long as your battery, charger and mobile phone are all from
reputable manufacturers. Badly manufactured chargers and mobile phones may have
overcharge protection circuit that fails, cause your battery to get over
charged. When you battery gets overcharged, the internal cell undergoes a
chemical reaction, and the battery start to bloat.
View photos
More
If the bloat is too much, the battery ruptures, causing
the internals to be exposed to air, resulting in fire and explosion.
View photo
While this is still O.K. if you are around and can swiftly
put out the fire or prevent the fire from spreading, leaving your smart phone
to charge unattended isn’t safe. Your whole house would have burnt to the ground while you
sleep.
If you are using batteries, chargers and mobile phones
from reputable brand, maybe you can risk it by charging your devices
unattended. But know that accidents have happened before. If you are using
third party batteries (e.g. iPhone with battery replaced by OEM versions),
cheap china chargers or phones, please, never, never risk it.
Does overnight charging harm your smartphone battery?
Actually yes. As mentioned above, keeping the battery at full or close to full
charge state actually makes your battery lose capacity faster. Imagine having a
100% charge state for 1/3 of a day, every single day. That wears out your
battery much faster. There may be increased battery wear due to the charger
constantly topping up your phone to maintain 100% charge. On the other
hand, be consoled that chargers, if functioning properly, will automatically
step down and stop the charging once your phone battery reaches 100%. This
means that no excessive heat that is harmful to your battery is produced.
In conclusion, charging of Li batteries always come with a
small risk of fire. However, such risks can be mitigated if you only use
batteries, chargers and phones from reputable manufacturers. At the same time,
leaving the phone or in fact, any other such gadgets to charge unattended is a
bad idea because you may not have time to contain the fire if indeed an
accident did happen. Overnight charging also harms your battery, decreasing its
lifespan and resulting in an earlier need for battery replacement.
Sharing is caring. Let your friends know this important
bit of information.
The same information discussed here applies to all other
gadgets that uses the same battery type. Heard stories of hoverboard exploding?
That is because the structure of the hoverboard cracked, resulting in rupture
of battery and hence explosion. Mobile phones exploding while in pocket? Due to
short circuit, bloated battery, rupture, explosion.
Everything that happens are related to the few bullet
points highlighted above.
You can also use the information above to prolong the
lifespan of your battery, to ensure the longevity of your gadgets. Keep your
battery charge close to the halfway mark as frequently as possible. If you are
storing your gadget because you will not be using it for the next few months,
charge to about 60-70% charge before storing them to ensure that the battery
don’t die. Don’t place your gadgets or batteries in warm or hot areas. The list
goes on.
Note: Shared from Yahoo
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