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Is lithium-ion the ideal battery? (BU5)
For many years, nickel-cadmium had been the only suitable battery
for portable equipment from wireless communications to mobile computing.
Nickel-metal-hydride and lithium-ion emerged In the early 1990s, fighting
nose-to-nose to gain customer's acceptance. Today, lithium-ion is
the fastest growing and most promising battery chemistry.
The
lithium-ion battery
Pioneer work with the lithium battery began in 1912 under G.N. Lewis
but it was not until the early 1970s when the first non-rechargeable
lithium batteries became commercially available. lithium is the
lightest of all metals, has the greatest electrochemical potential
and provides the largest energy density for weight.
Attempts to develop rechargeable lithium batteries failed due to
safety problems. Because of the inherent instability of lithium
metal, especially during charging, research shifted to a non-metallic
lithium battery using lithium ions. Although slightly lower in energy
density than lithium metal, lithium-ion is safe, provided certain
precautions are met when charging and discharging. In 1991, the
Sony Corporation commercialized the first lithium-ion battery. Other
manufacturers followed suit.
The energy density of lithium-ion is typically twice that of the
standard nickel-cadmium. There is potential for higher energy densities.
The load characteristics are reasonably good and behave similarly
to nickel-cadmium in terms of discharge. The high cell voltage of
3.6 volts allows battery pack designs with only one cell. Most of
today's mobile phones run on a single cell. A nickel-based pack
would require three 1.2-volt cells connected in series.
Lithium-ion is a low maintenance battery, an advantage that most
other chemistries cannot claim. There is no memory and no scheduled
cycling is required to prolong the battery's life. In addition,
the self-discharge is less than half compared to nickel-cadmium,
making lithium-ion well suited for modern fuel gauge applications.
lithium-ion cells cause little harm when disposed.
Despite its overall advantages, lithium-ion has its drawbacks. It
is fragile and requires a protection circuit to maintain safe operation.
Built into each pack, the protection circuit limits the peak voltage
of each cell during charge and prevents the cell voltage from dropping
too low on discharge. In addition, the cell temperature is monitored
to prevent temperature extremes. The maximum charge and discharge
current on most packs are is limited to between 1C and 2C. With
these precautions in place, the possibility of metallic lithium
plating occurring due to overcharge is virtually eliminated.
Aging is a concern with most lithium-ion batteries and many manufacturers
remain silent about this issue. Some capacity deterioration is noticeable
after one year, whether the battery is in use or not. The battery
frequently fails after two or three years. It should be noted that
other chemistries also have age-related degenerative effects. This
is especially true for nickel-metal-hydride if exposed to high ambient
temperatures. At the same time, lithium-ion packs are known to have
served for five years in some applications.
Manufacturers are constantly improving lithium-ion. New and enhanced
chemical combinations are introduced every six months or so. With
such rapid progress, it is difficult to assess how well the revised
battery will age.
Storage in a cool place slows the aging process of lithium-ion (and
other chemistries). Manufacturers recommend storage temperatures
of 15°C (59°F). In addition, the battery should be partially
charged during storage. The manufacturer recommends a 40% charge.
The most economical lithium-ion battery in terms of cost-to-energy
ratio is the cylindrical 18650 (18 is the diameter and 650 the length
in mm). This cell is used for mobile computing and other applications
that do not demand ultra-thin geometry. If a slim pack is required,
the prismatic lithium-ion cell is the best choice. These cells come
at a higher cost in terms of stored energy.
Advantages
- High energy density - potential for yet higher capacities.
- Does not need prolonged priming when new. One regular charge
is all that's needed.
- Relatively low self-discharge - self-discharge is less than
half that of nickel-based batteries.
- Low Maintenance - no periodic discharge is needed; there is
no memory.
- Specialty cells can provide very high current to applications
such as power tools.
Limitations
- Requires protection circuit to maintain voltage and current
within safe limits.
- Subject to aging, even if not in use - storage in a cool place
at 40% charge reduces the aging effect.
- Transportation restrictions - shipment of larger quantities
may be subject to regulatory control. This restriction does not
apply to personal carry-on batteries. (See last section)
- Expensive to manufacture - about 40 percent higher in cost
than nickel-cadmium.
- Not fully mature - metals and chemicals are changing on a continuing
basis.
The
lithium Polymer battery
The lithium-polymer differentiates itself from conventional battery
systems in the type of electrolyte used. The original design, dating
back to the 1970s, uses a dry solid polymer electrolyte. This electrolyte
resembles a plastic-like film that does not conduct electricity
but allows ions exchange (electrically charged atoms or groups of
atoms). The polymer electrolyte replaces the traditional porous
separator, which is soaked with electrolyte.
The dry polymer design offers simplifications with respect to fabrication,
ruggedness, safety and thin-profile geometry. With a cell thickness
measuring as little as one millimeter (0.039 inches), equipment
designers are left to their own imagination in terms of form, shape
and size.
Unfortunately, the dry lithium-polymer suffers from poor conductivity.
The internal resistance is too high and cannot deliver the current
bursts needed to power modern communication devices and spin up
the hard drives of mobile computing equipment. Heating the cell
to 60°C (140°F) and higher increases the conductivity, a
requirement that is unsuitable for portable applications.
To compromise, some gelled electrolyte has been added. The commercial
cells use a separator/ electrolyte membrane prepared from the same
traditional porous polyethylene or polypropylene separator filled
with a polymer, which gels upon filling with the liquid electrolyte.
Thus the commercial lithium-ion polymer cells are very similar in
chemistry and materials to their liquid electrolyte counter parts.
Lithium-ion-polymer has not caught on as quickly as some analysts
had expected. Its superiority to other systems and low manufacturing
costs has not been realized. No improvements in capacity gains are
achieved - in fact, the capacity is slightly less than that of the
standard lithium-ion battery. Lithium-ion-polymer finds its market
niche in wafer-thin geometries, such as batteries for credit cards
and other such applications.
Advantages
- Very low profile - batteries resembling the profile of a credit card
are feasible.
- Flexible form factor - manufacturers are not bound by standard
cell formats. With high volume, any reasonable size can be produced economically.
- Lightweight - gelled electrolytes enable simplified packaging by eliminating
the metal shell.
- Improved safety - more resistant to overcharge; less
chance for electrolyte leakage.
Limitations
- Lower energy density and decreased cycle count compared to
lithium-ion.
- Expensive to manufacture.
- No standard sizes. Most cells are produced for high volume
consumer markets.
- Higher cost-to-energy ratio than lithium-ion
Restrictions
on lithium content for air travel
Air travelers ask the question, "How much lithium in a battery
am I allowed to bring on board?" We differentiate between two
battery types: Lithium metal and lithium-ion.
Most lithium metal batteries are non-rechargeable and are used in
film cameras. Lithium-ion packs are rechargeable and power laptops,
cellular phones and camcorders. Both battery types, including spare
packs, are allowed as carry-on but cannot exceed the following lithium
content:
- 2 grams for lithium metal or lithium alloy batteries
- 8 grams for lithium-ion batteries
Lithium-ion batteries exceeding 8 grams but no more than 25 grams
may be carried in carry-on baggage if individually protected to prevent
short circuits and are limited to two spare batteries per person.
How do I know the lithium content of a lithium-ion battery?
From a theoretical perspective, there is no metallic lithium in a
typical lithium-ion battery. There is, however, equivalent lithium
content that must be considered. For a lithium-ion cell, this is calculated
at 0.3 times the rated capacity (in ampere-hours).
Example: A 2Ah 18650 Li-ion cell has 0.6 grams of lithium
content. On a typical 60 Wh laptop battery with 8 cells (4 in series
and 2 in parallel), this adds up to 4.8g. To stay under the 8-gram
UN limit, the largest battery you can bring is 96 Wh. This pack could
include 2.2Ah cells in a 12 cells arrangement (4s3p). If the 2.4Ah
cell were used instead, the pack would need to be limited to 9 cells
(3s3p).
Restrictions
on shipment of lithium-ion batteries
- Anyone
shipping lithium-ion batteries in bulk is responsible to meet
transportation regulations. This applies to domestic and international
shipments by land, sea and air.
-
Lithium-ion cells whose equivalent lithium content exceeds 1.5
grams or 8 grams per battery pack must be shipped as "Class
9 miscellaneous hazardous material." Cell capacity and the
number of cells in a pack determine the lithium content.
-
Exception is given to packs that contain less than 8 grams of
lithium content. If, however, a shipment contains more than 24
lithium cells or 12 lithium-ion battery packs, special markings
and shipping documents will be required. Each package must be
marked that it contains lithium batteries.
-
All lithium-ion batteries must be tested in accordance with specifications
detailed in UN 3090 regardless of lithium content (UN manual of
Tests and Criteria, Part III, subsection 38.3). This precaution
safeguards against the shipment of flawed batteries.
-
Cells & batteries must be separated to prevent short-circuiting
and packaged in strong boxes.
_________________________
Created: April 2003, Last edited: November 2006
About the Author
Isidor Buchmann is the founder and CEO of Cadex Electronics Inc.,
in Vancouver BC.
Mr. Buchmann has a background in radio communications and has studied
the behavior of rechargeable batteries in practical, everyday applications
for two decades. Award winning author of many articles and books on
batteries, Mr. Buchmann has delivered technical papers around the
world.
Cadex Electronics is a manufacturer of advanced battery chargers,
battery analyzers and PC software. For product information please
visit www.cadex.com.
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©
Copyright 2003 - 2005 Isidor Buchmann
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