yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

Why your phone battery gets worse over time - George Zaidan


4m read
·Nov 8, 2024

A drop of gasoline, a match, and a battery, all store energy—but, after each expends its energy, only the battery is recyclable. That's because, chemically speaking, a dead battery is actually not that different from a fresh one. Most of the batteries we use today take advantage of the fact that some metals like to release electrons and others like to accept them.

For example, in a typical alkaline double-A battery, zinc metal reacts with hydroxide ions, changing into zinc oxide and releasing electrons at the negative terminal. The electrons travel through, say, a light bulb, and then return to the battery at the positive terminal, where they’re accepted by manganese dioxide. Different batteries use different combinations of metals, and sometimes non-metals like graphite, but the basic idea is to use a pair of chemical reactions to generate a stream of electrons.

Almost all batteries, even single-use batteries, are theoretically rechargeable. That's because the metals and other chemicals are still right there. That’s very different than in, say, gasoline, where the liquid hydrocarbon molecules are converted to gases. You can't convert exhaust back into gasoline, but, with some work, you can convert, say, zinc oxide back to zinc.

So then what's the difference between these and these? The short answer is that trying to recharge a single-use battery doesn’t just force these reactions to run in reverse. It also results in a bunch of side reactions that produce useless contaminants, reducing a battery’s capacity; and it could even damage the internal structure of the battery, leading to a loss of electrical contact and failure. Rechargeable batteries are engineered to avoid these issues.

Look at this lithium-ion battery. Both sides have an atomic-level structure that you can imagine as lots of docks. So when the battery is powering something, the lithium “ships” give up their electrons to power the circuit, and then sail over to the other side of the battery, dock in an orderly, organized way, and meet up with their now-lower-energy electrons.

When the battery is being charged, the opposite happens. Over the course of hundreds, sometimes thousands, of charge cycles, some of the lithium ion ships sort of veer off course and engage in side reactions, producing stuff that increases the internal resistance of the battery, which in turn makes it lose efficiency and power until it inevitably dies. Even when that happens, you can bring dead batteries back to life—whether they’re rechargeable or not—by recycling them.

The heart of most battery recycling is a process called smelting, which is basically just melting the metallic parts. This drives off impurities, returning metals back to their initial, orderly state. Unfortunately, in many countries, you can’t just toss household batteries in with your regular recycling. You have to take them to a battery collection point or recycling center. Same goes for more complicated rechargeable batteries: you need to bring them to a collection point or send them back to the company you bought them from.

It’s a pain, but absolutely worth the time and effort, because recycling batteries is critical. Not only does it prevent potentially toxic battery metals from leaking into the environment, it conserves scarce—and vital—resources. Earth has about 22 million tons of lithium—enough for about 2.5 billion EVs. That sounds like plenty, but it’s only 25% higher than the number of EVs experts believe it’ll take to reach net zero emissions by 2050, and that doesn’t even account for laptops, phones, and anything else that uses a lithium-ion battery.

Currently, though, most lithium-ion batteries are not manufactured with recycling in mind. The designs are intricate and non-standard, and the components are held together by almost indestructible glues. So today, less than 5% of lithium-ion batteries are recycled. Regulations that clearly define who is responsible for a spent battery and what should happen to it can boost recycling dramatically.

For example, lead-acid batteries are generally subject to stringent regulations and are recycled at much higher rates than lithium-ion batteries. Over the next century, we’ll need to recycle huge numbers of EV batteries, so scientists are working on making the battery recycling process cheaper and more environmentally friendly. Smelting uses a lot of energy and, depending on the type of battery, can release harmful by-products.

In addition to regulations, industrial processes, and our own individual choices, battery tech will also continue to evolve. There are proof-of-concept batteries being developed that can convert physical force, ambient sound, and even pee into electricity. But if your top priority is to make your number one source of power, number one, sorry to say, but urine for a long wait.

More Articles

View All
You Won't Get Rich Renting Out Your Time
Next, you go into more specific details on how you can actually get rich and how you can’t get rich. The first point was about how you’re not going to get rich. You’re not going to get rich renting off your time. You must own equity, a piece of a business…
2015 AP Calculus BC 2c | AP Calculus BC solved exams | AP Calculus BC | Khan Academy
Part C: Find the time at which the speed of the particle is three. So let’s just remind ourselves what speed is. It’s the magnitude of velocity. If you have the x, actually let me draw it this way. If you have the x dimension of, or the x component of a …
Ray Dalio & Bill Belichick on Tough Love: Part 1
The most challenging part was to be tough on tough love. I used to think about Vince Lombardi’s tough love. Tough love, you know, you got to be that toughness that then raises them to another level. And then when you give it with love, you got to give it …
Second "Ask Sal anything" session focused on life advice
Let’s start with, uh, Christine. I believe, Christine, you had your hand very patiently raised last time, so let’s start with you now. A reminder, we are recording this session, as I put the last one on LinkedIn, so this could happen again. So, by partici…
Stop Buying Homes
What’s up guys, it’s Graham here! So listen, there are very few topics out there that get me upset, and most of the time, I’m just able to brush it off and move on with my day. But when I see flat-out blatant misinformation being spread throughout the int…
Don't Shoot a Blue Tongue Deer | The Boonies
You can see we’re on a deer trail. There’s probably one coming down this way. In Western Idaho, Bearclaw is on the hunt for white-tailed deer. He and his good friend Conan have decided to cover more ground. But over the past 4 hours, there are no signs o…