Li-ion battery constraints go a long way
toward explaining why smartphone vendors spend millions on incremental design
advantages in a market that's moving with blinding speed. If you're trying to
figure out what your iPhone 5 -- or your next Android device or Windows Phone
-- is going to look like, here are six
things you need to know about smartphone batteries.
1.Battery in a bag
A Li-ion pouch cell is a sealed bag
containing carefully layered anode and cathode sheets, separators between them,
and -- permeating all of these layers -- a liquid electrolyte. Although tablet
batteries comprise several cells (three in the new iPad), smartphones are
generally powered by single cells. Either way, at one end of the battery, a
printed circuit board (PCB) is connected to the positive and negative terminals
of each cell and provides active protection against short circuits, overcharge,
and forced discharge. Li-ion pouch cells tend to be fragile and rely on the
smartphone case for protection, and so officially are not user-replaceable.
2.Squeezing in run-time
The energy
density of a Li-ion pouch cell determines how much run-time you can pack into a
given size (volumetric) or weight (gravimetric). Li-ion technology hit the
market in 1991. Since then, processor transistor count has increased more than
a thousand-fold, Li-ion energy density only threefold. Denser electronics are
what make dazzling features possible, but they draw ever more power. Unfortunately,
battery manufacturers are having a harder and harder time increasing energy
density. This is why non-replaceable Li-ion pouch batteries are popular with
smartphone and tablet designers. Without the protective case needed to make a
battery safe for consumers to handle -- which does nothing for energy capacity
-- they are thinner and pack more run-time into a smaller space.
3.The XYZ of
cells
Energy
density is affected by the thickness and the ratio between width (X) and length
(Y) of a Li-ion pouch cell. Volumetric energy density falls off as the pouch
gets thinner because the packaging takes up a higher percentage of battery
volume. The optimal X-Y ratio arises because when the PCB is installed on the
short edge of a narrow battery, there's more room for the active materials
(anode and cathode) that actually store energy. All other things being equal, a
narrow, thicker battery will deliver better volumetric energy density than a
more square one. (An interesting Apple patent reveals ways to mold batteries in
more complex shapes to fit into places like the bezel that are presently
impossible to use.)
4.The
necessity of keeping cool
Li-ion pouch cells don't like it hot -- a
common condition for smartphones, as anyone who's ever had to wait out the
"cool down" message knows. The standard Li-ion chemistry depends on
an electrolyte that reacts with residual moisture to create hydrofluoric acid,
the most corrosive of all chemical compounds. Like all chemical reactions, this
process doubles in speed with every increase in temperature of 10 degrees
Celsius. The result is reduced calendar and cycle life: not only does run-time
degrade with simple age, but each charge and discharge further reduces it,
until the battery just doesn't last long enough between charges. Worse, Li-ion
cells generate heat themselves during charge and discharge: the more power your
smartphone calls for or the faster you charge it, the hotter the battery gets.
5.Building a
smartphone
Three-layer
or "carve-out"? The Motorola Droid Razr line (both Razr and Razr
Maxx) is an example of the three-layer approach to smartphone design: screen, circuitry, and
battery. The iPhone 4 comprises two layers -- screen and electronics -- with a
space carved out of the PCB for the battery. In either case, a bigger screen
means room for a bigger battery. Regardless of the other advantages of each
approach, the narrower, thicker battery possible with the carve-out approach
will offer higher energy density. In a three-layer approach, it's also more
difficult to shield the battery from components that generate heat and thus
shorten battery life.
6.Chemistry: Wild card of the pack
Improvements
in Li-ion chemistry may offer dramatic improvements in energy density, giving
smartphone designers more choices in the feature vs. run-time battle. There's a
lot of promising research into new active materials and some new solutions
already on the market. One of these uses a new Li-imide electrolyte that
doesn't generate hydrofluoric acid and thus delivers a dramatic improvement in
thermal stability and battery life.
It also permits effectively thinner batteries by eliminating most of the
swelling in thickness characteristic of current Li-ion pouch cells over their
useful life, which forces designers to sacrifice cavity space to accommodate
the swelling.
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