Camcorder Battery, Cellular Phone Battery, Cordless Phone Battery, Digital Camera Battery, Laptop Battery, DVD Player Battery
Items in cart:   0 
Current total:   $0.00     Edit  
Battery Finder
By Category
By Top Sellers
Other Links
Social Networking

Home Articles What causes laptop batteries to overheat?
Articles - What causes laptop batteries to overheat?
Dell and Apple Computer announced large recalls of laptop batteries in the summer of 2006, followed by Toshiba and Lenovo. Under the right circumstances, these batteries could overheat, potentially causing burns, an explosion or a fire.

To understand why that happened, it's helpful to know a little bit about how batteries work. Batteries have a negatively charged terminal and a positively charged terminal. In a battery, energy from electrochemical reactions causes electrons (negatively charged particles) to collect at the battery's negatively charged pole. Charged particles are attracted to opposite charge, so if you connect a battery to a circuit, the electrons will flow from the negative pole, through the circuit and to the battery's positively charged pole. In other words, the battery generates a moving charge, or electricity.

In addition to laptops and other electronic devices, lithium-ion batteries are used in electric cars. However, these batteries are less likely to catch fire due to numerous safety precautions, including cooling and automatic shutdown systems.
The exact reaction that generates the electrons varies, depending on the type of battery. In a lithium-ion battery, you'll find pressurized containers that house a coil of metal and a flammable, lithium-containing liquid. The manufacturing process creates tiny pieces of metal that float in the liquid. Manufacturers can't completely prevent these metal fragments, but good manufacturing techniques limit their size and number. The cells of a lithium-ion battery also contain separators that keep the anodes and cathodes, or positive and negative poles, from touching each other.

If the battery gets hot through use or recharging, the pieces of metal can move around, much like grains of rice in a pot of water. If a piece of metal gets too close to the separator, it can puncture the separator and cause a short circuit. There are a few possible scenarios for what can go wrong in the case of a short circuit:

  • If it creates a spark, the flammable liquid can ignite, causing a fire.
  • If it causes the temperature inside the battery to rise rapidly, the battery can explode due to the increased pressure.
  • If it causes the temperature to rise slowly, the battery can melt, and the liquid inside can leak out.
There are several reasons why multiple laptop battery models have been recalled in the past few years. People want small, lightweight laptops that they can use for long periods. They also want their laptops to have bright screens and lots of processing power. For these reasons, laptop batteries have to be relatively small, but they also have to hold a lot of energy and last a long time.

Making lithium-ion batteries that can hold more power for a longer period requires vital components, including the separators, to be small and thin. The reduction in size makes it more likely that the batteries can fail, break, leak or short circuit.


See Related Articles:
[Short Guide on Laptop Batteries] (Dec 2010)
A few things you should know about your Laptop Battery (Jul 2010)
All about Lithium-ion Batteries (1) (Jun 2010)
All about Lithium-ion Batteries (2) (Jun 2010)
All about Lithium-ion Batteries (3) (Jun 2010)
Connections of a characteristic laptop battery (Nov 2008)
Few Ways to Take Care of Your Laptop Battery (Sep 2010)
Getting the most of your batteries (Dec 2003)
History of laptops (Sep 2008)
How Are Laptop Batteries Rated? (Aug 2010)
How to re-calibrate your Laptop Battery? (Nov 2008)
How to store batteries (Mar 2004)
Improving lithium-ion batteries (Jan 2006)
Instructions to keep your Laptop Battery last longer (Aug 2008)
Is it the right time to change your laptop battery? (Sep 2009)
Laptop battery exhaustion! (May 2010)
Laptop battery power management & power usage (Aug 2010)
Laptop battery tests (Feb 2009)
Lithium-Ion Battery Packs suit cordless power tools (Jan 2006)
New Laptop Battery (Jun 2010)
Not all chargers are alike - Improve battery performance with proper charge methods (Dec 2001)
Optimize the Longevity of your Laptop Battery On sale (Feb 2011)
Options to Charge the Refused Laptop Battery (Oct 2010)
[Short Guide on Laptop Batteries] (Dec 2010)
Sony Laptop Battery (Mar 2011)
“The Positives and Negatives to Lithium Batteries for Laptops” (Dec 2010)
Valence Technology Announces Expansion of its Lithium-ion Battery Line (Jan 2006)
What causes car batteries to fail early? (Jun 2004)
What causes laptop batteries to overheat? (May 2010)
Why are li-ion batteries the best for laptops? (Dec 2010)
Why doesn’t my laptop battery persist any longer (Dec 2008)
Will Lithium-Ion batteries power the new millennium? (Sep 2001)
Alphabetical Links
0-9  A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

Do you need battery? NeedBattery.com is ultimate source for Batteries, adapters and accessories at rock bottom prices. We have AA/AAA rechargeable battery, Alkaline battery, Barcode Scanner battery, Camcorder battery, cellular Phone battery, Cordless Phone battery, Digital Camera battery, DVD Player battery, Flashlight battery, GPS battery, Laptop battery, MP3 Portable music Player battery, PDA battery, Portable Game Player battery, Power Tool Battery, Printer, Professional Camcorder battery, RC Hobby, Two Way Radio Battery, UPS battery.
Orders | Shipping & Returns | Help | Terms Of Use

Copyright NeedBattery.com © NeedBattery.com, 2007-2010 All Rights Reserved