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August 17, 2006

geekery

How likely are Li-ion batteries to explode?

Authored by Dan Moren at 3:58 PM
Category | Geekery
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Dell on FireThere's been a fair amount of news about exploding batteries in the past few weeks, crowned with the reports that Dell has initiated a recall of over 4 million laptop batteries. Ars Technica takes a look at whether the recurring problem is just a danger of the lithium-ion technology:

However, a potential failure can arise if—during the Li-ion manufacturing process—metal particles are allowed to contaminate the interior of the cells. Over time, those particles can move into the separator, which is an insulating barrier between the anode and cathode sides of the cell. That creates a short circuit between anode and cathode, allowing electrons to flow freely and quickly, and the battery fails.

Most of the time, that failure will consist of little more than the battery powering down and ceasing to function properly. In rare instances, the battery will overheat, then melt, catch fire, or even explode.

The chances of a battery exploding are very slim, but they are not impossible. The batteries Dell is recalling were made by Sony, and as of yet it's not known if they are the source of the malfunction, or something else possibly triggered the battery explosion. For now, though, as you were.



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