Readers react to rechargeable batteries and more

Thursday, January 16, 2020 - 16:10 in Physics & Chemistry

Safety first Three scientists won the 2019 Nobel Prize in chemistry for developing lithium-ion batteries, Maria Temming and Jonathan Lambert reported in “The development of the lithium-ion battery has won the chemistry Nobel Prize” (SN: 11/9/19, p. 12). Since the rechargeable batteries were first created in the 1970s, they have become safer and cheaper. “I love my devices, but it’s not yet a brave new world for tech,” reader Doug Pruner wrote. Victims of lithium-ion battery explosions would probably emphasize that “safer” batteries are not necessarily “safe,” Pruner noted. “Marketing pressures, not tech, drive the push for more power and concurrent smaller size. Sometimes, Kaboom!” he wrote. Temming agrees that lithium-ion batteries aren’t totally safe. The batteries can explode when heat from a short circuit ignites their highly flammable liquid electrolyte. Exploding smartphones, wireless headphones and hoverboards have made headlines. Amanda Morris, a chemist at Virginia Tech in Blacksburg, told Temming that researchers are developing new...

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