Why your phone battery gets worse over time - George Zaidan

566,165 views ・ 2023-08-03

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:07
A drop of gasoline, a match, and a battery, all store energy—
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but, after each expends its energy, only the battery is recyclable.
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That's because, chemically speaking,
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a dead battery is actually not that different from a fresh one.
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Most of the batteries we use today take advantage
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of the fact that some metals like to release electrons
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and others like to accept them.
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For example, in a typical alkaline double-A battery,
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zinc metal reacts with hydroxide ions,
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changing into zinc oxide and releasing electrons at the negative terminal.
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The electrons travel through, say, a light bulb,
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and then return to the battery at the positive terminal,
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where they’re accepted by manganese dioxide.
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Different batteries use different combinations of metals,
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and sometimes non-metals like graphite,
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but the basic idea is to use a pair of chemical reactions
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to generate a stream of electrons.
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01:02
Almost all batteries, even single-use batteries,
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are theoretically rechargeable.
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That's because the metals and other chemicals are still right there.
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That’s very different than in, say, gasoline,
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where the liquid hydrocarbon molecules are converted to gases.
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You can't convert exhaust back into gasoline,
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but, with some work you can convert, say, zinc oxide back to zinc.
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So then what's the difference between these and these?
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The short answer is that trying to recharge a single-use battery
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doesn’t just force these reactions to run in reverse.
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It also results in a bunch of side reactions that produce
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useless contaminants,
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reducing a battery’s capacity;
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and it could even damage the internal structure of the battery,
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leading to a loss of electrical contact and failure.
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Rechargeable batteries are engineered to avoid these issues.
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Look at this lithium-ion battery.
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Both sides have an atomic-level structure that you can imagine as lots of docks.
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So when the battery is powering something,
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the lithium “ships” give up their electrons to power the circuit,
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and then sail over to the other side of the battery,
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dock in an orderly, organized way,
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and meet up with their now-lower-energy electrons.
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When the battery is being charged, the opposite happens.
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Over the course of hundreds, sometimes thousands, of charge cycles,
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some of the lithium ion ships sort of veer off course
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and engage in side reactions,
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producing stuff that increases the internal resistance of the battery,
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which in turn makes it lose efficiency and power
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until it inevitably dies.
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Even when that happens, you can bring dead batteries back to life—
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whether they’re rechargeable or not— by recycling them.
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The heart of most battery recycling is a process called smelting,
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which is basically just melting the metallic parts.
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This drives off impurities,
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returning metals back to their initial, orderly state.
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Unfortunately, in many countries you can’t just toss household batteries
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in with your regular recycling.
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You have to take them to a battery collection point or recycling center.
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Same goes for more complicated rechargeable batteries:
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you need to bring them to a collection point
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or send them back to the company you bought them from.
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It’s a pain, but absolutely worth the time and effort,
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because recycling batteries is critical.
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Not only does it prevent potentially toxic battery metals
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from leaking into the environment,
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it conserves scarce— and vital— resources.
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Earth has about 22 million tons of lithium—
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enough for about 2.5 billion EVs.
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That sounds like plenty, but it’s only 25% higher than the number of EVs
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experts believe it’ll take to reach net zero emissions by 2050,
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and that doesn’t even account for laptops, phones, and anything else
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that uses a lithium-ion battery.
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Currently, though, most lithium-ion batteries are not manufactured
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with recycling in mind.
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The designs are intricate and non-standard,
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and the components are held together by almost indestructible glues.
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So today, less than 5% of lithium-ion batteries are recycled.
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04:07
Regulations that clearly define who is responsible for a spent battery
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and what should happen to it can boost recycling dramatically.
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For example, lead-acid batteries are generally subject to stringent regulations
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and are recycled at much higher rates than lithium-ion batteries.
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Over the next century, we’ll need to recycle huge numbers of EV batteries,
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so scientists are working on making the battery recycling process cheaper
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and more environmentally friendly.
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Smelting uses a lot of energy and, depending on the type of battery,
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can release harmful by-products.
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In addition to regulations, industrial processes, and our own individual choices,
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battery tech will also continue to evolve.
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There are proof-of-concept batteries being developed that can convert
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physical force, ambient sound, and even pee into electricity.
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But if your top priority is to make your number one source of power, number one,
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sorry to say, but urine for a long wait.
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