Archive for August, 2009

Nanotech Batteries – A New Energy Future

August 3rd, 2009

People want to use clean and green energy and live easy on earth’s resources. Many are changing to hybrid cars and using solar panels side by side with conventional sources of energy. But they hold a grudge. How to store large amount of energy in batteries? Hybrid cars fit laptop batteries for power storage. But this power is not enough to last long distances and takes many undesirable hours to recharge. The storage battery is not very helpful during acceleration. Solar Panel and wind also don’t provide us with power at constant rate. They give us energy intermittently. Their storage devices also take lots of space and money as well and yet they don’t seem promising for surge demand. Gary Rubloff, who is the director of the University of Maryland’s NanoCenter is also voicing a common consumer’s concern, “Renewable energy sources like solar and wind provide time-varying, somewhat unpredictable energy supply, which must be captured and stored as electrical energy until demanded. Conventional devices to store and deliver electrical energy — batteries and capacitors — cannot achieve the needed combination of high energy density, high power, and fast recharge that are essential for our energy future.”

 

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Scientists at the Maryland NanoCenter at the University of Maryland have produced new systems for storing electrical energy derived from alternative sources that are, in some cases, 10 times more efficient than what is commercially available.

Electrical energy storage devices can be categorized into three groups. Each group has its advantages and disadvantages. Laptop Batteries, mainly consisting of lithium ion, accumulate large amounts of energy but cannot afford high power or fast recharge. The second type is electrochemical capacitors (ECCs). Their advantage is they can offer higher power at the price of relatively lower energy density. The third storage device is electrostatic capacitors (ESCs). They store charge on the surfaces of two conductors. This way they are capable of high power and fast recharge, but at the price of lower energy density.

Scientists are using new processes to enhance the storage capacity of the devices. They are banking upon millions of identical nanostructures having peculiar shapes that will facilitate energy transport with the help of electrons. Electrons will move to and fro and store energy at a very large surface area. We all are familiar with the fact that materials behave according to physical laws of nature. The Maryland researchers are using this fact to their advantage. They are utilizing unusual combinations of these behaviors to produce millions and in the end billions of tiny, virtually indistinguishable nanostructures. These are supposed to receive, store, and deliver electrical energy, The battery can used in 40Y7001, 40Y7003, 40Y6999 and ThinkPad X61s battery, ThinkPad R51 battery, thinkpad R52 battery, ThinkPad T60p battery, ThinkPad R60e battery.

Scientists are concentrating on self-assembly, self-limiting reaction, and self-alignment behaviors of nanostructures. Rubloff clarifies further, “The goal for electrical energy storage systems is to simultaneously achieve high power and high energy density to enable the devices to hold large amounts of energy, to deliver that energy at high power, and to recharge rapidly (the complement to high power).”

The Maryland research team is going for electrostatic nanocapacitors. They significantly increase energy storage density of such devices – by a factor of 10 over that of commercially available devices. This advance puts electrostatic devices to a performance level competitive with electrochemical capacitors.

The research team is right from the beginning building up the technology for commercial purposes. Their outward appearance would be like thin solar panels produced at economical costs. Multiple storage devices can be staked one over the other inside a car battery system. For the solar and wind energy storage they dream about the fully integrated with storage devices in manufacturing.

Zen and the Art of Laptop Battery Maintenance

August 2nd, 2009

Zen and the Art of Laptop Battery Maintenance

Keep your notebook or netbook’s power pack in tune

We all own more battery powered products than ever before, and in most cases those laptop batteries are rechargeable. Laptops, music players, phones – they all have rechargeable power packs, almost all of them using lithium.

These batteries don’t last forever. No matter what you do, their capacity to hold charge will decline over time, typically down to 80 per cent after 12-18 months in the case of laptop batteries.

That’s a range, not an absolute cut-off point, so how can we make these batteries last as long as possible? Ignoring the exceedingly rare risk of a fire, is there any way to ensure we get the best performance from our portable power supplies?

Follow some basic rules, and the answer is yes.

The model usage pattern is the mobile phone. Of all the rechargeable laptop batteries we’ve used, the ones in phones have always proved to retain their capacity longer than batteries in laptops, cameras and MP3 players. It takes a long time, generally speaking, for a phone battery to reach the point where no matter how long you charge it, it goes from full to empty in a very short space of time.

Contrast that with the netbook battery sitting next to us, which although less than a year old will discharge from full in under 20 minutes. That’s with the netbook just sitting there, screen on, connected to the internet. It should last eight times that.

The keys to pa3420u-1brs battery longevity are regular usage and making sure cells are recharged before they become empty. Phone batteries typically take a couple of days to run down and tend not to be constantly on and off the charger during that period. Rather than waiting until the phone has so little power it switches off, most handset owners recharge their phones when they get a low-charge warning, usually around ten per cent capacity.

This ensures a steady, even cycle of charge and discharge, and if there’s an operating condition lithium batteries respond well to it’s regularity.

The 6t473 Laptop batteries won’t, of course, give you two days of usage, so it’s not necessarily practical to follow that charge-discharge-recharge pattern exactly, but you can get close. Make sure you regularly use your laptop on battery power. Don’t work on it with it always plugged into the mains.

If you do use the mains as your primary power source – as you might well if the notebook’s your main machine – at least make sure you use your laptop on HP Pavilion DV4000 battery power a couple of times a week. This is what we didn’t do with the netbook. It has stayed attached to its AC adaptor for most of its life, with the battery barely being used.

The connected battery will charge to 100 per cent and then the battery pack’s electronics will ensure the cells receive no further charge. At this point, the biggest threat to the battery is heat from the laptop’s internals. Make sure your laptop’s vents don’t become covered. Beyond the heat generated by its operation, a laptop can safely be left connected to the mains.

There’s no harm in removing the battery from a laptop that’s going to stay connected to the mains for a while. Just make a note of the optimum HP Pavilion DV1000 battery storage conditions – more on this later – and don’t inadvertently yank the power cable. With no battery, there’s no back-up for your laptop’s memory.

Apple machines are an exception, and others may be too: they auto-underclock the processor when the battery’s removed, so despite being connected to the mains, they won’t run at full strength. We think that’s daft, but that’s Apple for you.

When you use your laptop on PB995A battery power, make sure its charge drops to at least 80 per cent. But don’t let it drop to zero. Depending on which operating system you use and how its power settings are configured, you’ll get a low-power warning first and, later, your machine will sleep, hibernate or shut down.

At this point, your battery should still be charged to 5-10 per cent of its capacity, and you should now charge it, whether you want to continue working or not. If you’re not going to be able to do so for some time, make sure you’ve saved your work and your laptop’s shut down or hibernating rather than sleeping. These two modes turn the laptop off whereas sleeping just keeps it ticking over, but power is still being drained and you run the risk of emptying the battery.

Completely draining the battery is a no-no. Battery manufacturers and laptop makers say that it’s a good idea to drain the HP Pavilion ZV5000 battery as far as the laptop will allow every so often and to then charge fully in order to synchronise the various capacity monitors within the power pack and the laptop. That ensures that your capacity read-outs are as accurate as they can be.

There seems to be a consensus that daily-use laptops don’t really need this, and certainly not on even a monthly basis. Occasional-use laptops, on the other hand, may benefit.

Eking out the charge while your using your computer on Pavilion ZV5000 battery power is simply a matter of disabling Bluetooth and Wi-Fi if you don’t need them, making sure your system spins down the hard drive when it’s not required, and – perhaps best of all – dimming the screen’s backlight.

How temperature affects a battery’s capacity decline
Battery capacity after one year

If running to empty or never discharging at all are to be avoided, high temperatures are right out. Batteries’ inevitable capacity decline can be slowed by keeping the inspiron 1150 battery cool

According to website Battery University, a battery kept full will see its capacity drop by six per cent after a year if it’s kept at freezing point. Kept at 60°C, however, the same battery will lose 40 per cent of its capacity to hold charge after just three months.

At 25°C, you’re looking at a 20 per cent capacity loss after one year. Since your working environment is likely to be less than 25°C, the reduction will you see will be a little less than that, and by making sure the Toshiba PA3107U-1BRS battery is used regularly and evenly, you should be able to delay the point at which the battery has only 80 per cent of its starting capacity to 18 months or more.


Cycle logical: check your battery’s recharge count in Mac OS X

Hot-running laptops will have the reverse effect, so if your notebook’s like that, consider buying a cooling stand to help draw heat away from the machine and Compaq Presario V4000 battery. Don’t keep your laptop in a hot car cabin, or in direct sunlight.

If your laptop’s going to remain unused for a long period, keep it cool. Never freeze it, but sticking the battery in the fridge, for example, will prolong its life. Battery manufacturers recommend storing batteries with a charge level of 40-50 per cent.

If you do refrigerate a Pavilion ZD8000 battery, don’t start using it as soon as you take it out again. Leave it several hours to warm up to room temperature first. Rapid warming could cause condensation, and you don’t want moisture forming inside your battery pack or laptop.

If you have a spare battery pack handy, keep it cool and charged to 40-50 per cent of its maximum capacity until you’re ready to take it on your travels. At that point, charge it up and use it as often as you use the other battery, so they both undergo regular charge and discharge cycles.

Charge Cycles Explained

Battery longevity – how long the battery lasts rather than how long it’ll power a device from a full charge – is typically measured in cycles, with one cycle being a discharge from full to empty.

This doesn’t need to happen all at once. A cycle is reached when 100 per cent of a Latitude D800 battery’s potential capacity has been taken, even if it’s charged up in the meantime. If you drain a battery by half one day, charge it back up, take 25 per cent the next day, charge it up again then drain it by a quarter on the third day, that’s one cycle: 50 per cent + 25 per cent + 25 per cent.

That might suggest the best way to eke out cycles isn’t to discharge the battery too much, but don’t forget, lithium-based Dell laptop battery like to be used, not left on 100 per cent all the time.

Laptop makers typically say a machine’s battery capacity will have declined to 80 per cent of its original capacity after 300-odd cycles.