What is the impact of charging a laptop for a long time?

It will not damage your battery.

It will shorten its life though, but there is nothing practical you can do about it.

Lithium Ion batteries age in two ways, one is through what is termed “Calendar Life” and the other is Cycle life.  Here is what you need to understand about both:

Calendar life  – the time spent at a given state of charge (SOC) and a given temperature causes a loss of capacity and increase in internal resistance that is proportional to the square root of the time.  Higher SOC imparts greater degradation.  Higher temperature imparts greater degradation.  Keeping your computer plugged in all the time with the battery ensures that the battery stays hot and charged as much as is possible.  If nothing else, turn down the performance of the laptop when you don’t need it to overperform so that it runs cooler.

Cycle life – while you might think that it makes sense to fully discharge the batteries, rather than put lots of little cycles into it, the opposite is true.  Lots of little cycles do virtually nothing to the cells.  100% discharges are the bane of their existance.

So, the reality is, you could optimize battery life by keeping the battery about 50% charged, letting it discharge a bit and then recharging it, and if chargers allowed for it, floating them at a SOC that was not 100%.  However, it is much much easier to just get on with life and use your laptop and not worry too much about this.  Assume your battery costs you $1 a day.  Put that much away for its replacement.  When it is fine on the day you buy your next computer, you have now paid for that new computer, or a good size chunk of it.

Will charging a mobile phone using a laptop decrease the laptop’s battery life?

A laptop battery typically has a capacity of 4000 to 10,000 maH and voltages ranging from 10 to 14 volts.

A cell phone like the iPhone 6 has a 1800mAh 3.7V battery.

First you are right, if the laptop is on charger than charging the cellphone by USB port does not cycle current from the laptop battery. The current comes from the laptop charger and only slows down the rate at which the laptop will recharge.

Second case, if the cell phone is charge from your laptop running on battery. Then the charge will come from the laptop battery and potentially reduce is life by using up charge cycles.

But the  iPhone 6 absorbes 6.7 WH for a full charge (3.7V x 1810 maH)
The laptop lets assume is a 10.2V 6000 maH system and therefore has energy of about 60 WH.

So charging a fully depleted iPhone from the laptop battery will take about 1/10th of the laptop charge.  or 1/10th of a discharge cycle. probably the laptop is rated for 1000 full discharge cycles? So a small part of its life is given up. I’d do it when travelling for convenience or emergency but not every night when at home.

Is it good to keep laptop batteries charged upto 100%?

It’s perfectly alright, you can work no problem

Well, modern batteries are intelligent enough to know whether they are fully charged or not, once they are completely charged the laptop automatically stops charging and starts working with direct D.C supply from the adapter.

I always connect my laptop to charger when i was in home and places where i have facility to connect.

This makes my battery give backup like the new one even after two years.

by the way, it will not increase the temparature. It even cools the laptop, because during charging battery heats up, it makes laptop hotter. If you connect it with charger, laptop works with D.C supply from adapter directly without the involvement of battery. so no heat will be generated from battery.

Lithium battery such as Li-Ion and Li-Pol has no memory effect.

Li-Ion has cycle life between 400 and 1200 cycles (most of them 800-1000), Li-Pol about 500-800 cycles. But it mean full cycle. If you discharge battery by 1% and then charge it to 100% it does not mean full cycle. Only 1% of full cycle.

Lithium battery must not by priming (or formatting). They do not need it. Formatting lithium battery just short their life.
Deep discharge is harmful.

In regard to Lithium battery has no memory effect I recommend charge laptop battery anywhere and anytime you can. Battery can powering standard notebook for about 2-5 hours (ultramobile notebooks can last more than 10 hours). It is very short time so everytime you have oportunity, charge!

But if you use laptop only in home, look for settings and try find function for extend battery life. Many modern notebooks have such function (in various names). It charge battery to maximum 80%.

If your laptop does not leave even your desk, charge battery to 50%, unplug battery from notebook and store it in 15°C. Twice per year check it. If voltage drop under 3 volts per cell, charge it again to 50%.

How do I keep my laptop’s battery in good health?

You’ve probably heard some people say you should drain your battery completely before charging it, or that you should keep it between 40% and 80% all the time to make it last longer.

Most of these rules are outdated, applying to older nickel-based batteries. Luckily, most or all of your gadgets these days run on Lithium Ion batteries, which are easy to take care of.

They last longer when you perform shallow discharges, keep them cool, and don’t leave them plugged in while they’re running at 100%. Honestly, though, batteries have a finite life no matter what, and your efforts will only go so far—so don’t stress about it.

Focus your efforts on getting better battery life out of your phone or laptop on a given charge instead—and knowing how to replace the battery when it starts dying.

Use Battery Settings on macOS

Apple’s MacBook, MacBook Air, and MacBook Pro laptops don’t have a battery slider, although many of the same settings described above are present in the Energy Saver preferences.

To open it, click on the Spotlight magnifying-glass icon in the upper right corner of the screen, search for Energy Saver, and then click on the Battery tab. If you want to approximate the Windows Better Battery or Battery Saver modes, make sure that the options “Put hard disks to sleep when possible” and “Slightly dim the display while on battery power” are checked, and the option “Enable Power Nap while on battery power” is unchecked. (With Power Nap enabled and your MacBook asleep, the machine will wake up now and then to check for updates. Disabling it keeps your MacBook fully asleep when it is asleep—until you choose wake it up.) On recent MacBook Pro laptops, the display brightness adjusts to 75 percent when you unplug the computer from power if you have “Slightly dim the display while on battery power” enabled.

So, if you want the best battery life, should you use Battery Saver all the time? Not exactly. Because Battery Saver mode disables some useful features, you might want to use it only when your battery is below 20 percent and a power outlet isn’t near. Likewise, turning off Power Nap can mean it will take longer to catch up on notifications you’ve missed while you’re away from your MacBook. That’s why most users should use the Better Battery setting and enable Power Nap most of the time.

Perfect Battery Life Estimates Are Impossible

Battery life is always hard to estimate. Even while you’re using a laptop, Windows might go from saying you have five hours left to only two hours depending on what you’re doing. That’s because performing more demanding activities on your laptop increases power consumption. A laptop won’t use much power while it’s just playing hardware-accelerated video on low brightness but increase the brightness level, and it’ll draw more power. If you start a demanding task that requires CPU power, it will draw even more power. That’s the real problem. Laptop battery life varies dramatically depending on what you’re doing. Manufacturers have decided to take the most unrealistic number they can find, but there’s no single battery life estimate that would work for everyone. However, a battery life test that simulates normal web browsing would be much more accurate and useful for most people.

New aluminum air battery comes light weight 5/6 volume reduction 1/2

Recently, Science published a paper on the battery. If the lithium battery is fully charged, the battery will lose 5% if it is not used for one month. If it is an aluminum air battery, it may lose 80% due to corrosion of aluminum. However, the researchers developed a new type of aluminum air battery, which lost only 0.02% a month, and the progress was quite obvious. In short, the new battery is five-fifths lighter and half smaller than a conventional battery.

Between the negative electrode of the battery and the positive electrode, there is generally a liquid electrolyte. When the ions move from the positive electrode to the negative electrode, the electrolyte collects electrons to form an electric current. In an aluminum air battery, the positive electrode is aluminum and the negative electrode is air. Because the air can be extracted from the environment, the aluminum resources are abundant, the weight is light, and the price is cheap, so the future of the aluminum air battery is bright.

Unfortunately, the electrolyte will corrode the aluminum after mixing and will corrode when used. If a non-corrosive electrolyte is used, the battery performance will be degraded. When the battery is re-used and the electrolyte is extracted, it will be found to be unusable because aluminum is hydrophilic (absorbent). The researchers found a solution: rinse the electrolyte with oil.

Between the positive and negative electrodes, the new battery has a thin film, and the two poles of the battery are filled with electrolyte. Once the battery is no longer in use, the oil will flush near one pole of the aluminum, which will protect the aluminum because the electrolyte has a lot of water and it cannot mix with the oil. When we use the battery again, the oil is replaced by the electrolyte. Because the oil does not melt in aluminum, there is no oil left.

The researchers tested the batteries under semi-realistic conditions. They used up a small portion of the battery, then placed the batteries unused, waited a day or two, and repeated the previous process. This test is somewhat similar to the use of urban electric vehicles. The researchers found that the battery lasted for 24 days and was eight times longer than traditional lithium-ion batteries.

Can aluminum air batteries replace lithium batteries in the next few years? No, no. There are some complications to solve when charging the battery, so the original aluminum air battery may not be a rechargeable battery, or the number of times of charging is small. There is also a possibility that the battery can be easily replaced. In the service station, the robotic arm takes the car battery out and replaces it with a fully charged battery so that we can charge it with more complicated mechanical methods.

One more thing to say is that the aluminum air battery does not seem to be shared with the lithium battery. In a hybrid car, gasoline can be shared with the car. However, we can extend the cruising distance with an aluminum air battery. When the owner forgets to charge the main battery, the aluminum air battery can be temporarily used. As one researcher puts it, the future of aluminum air batteries is bright. He said: “You can use it, then drive the car into the driveway, stop for a month, then start the car, the battery still has a lot of power.”

How to solve the problem of win7 laptop battery charge?

1. Control Panel – Power Management Options – High Performance – Change the schedule settings.

2. Find [Change Advanced Power Settings] in the pop-up window.

3. Adjust the brightness of the plan to be max. Wireless Adapter Settings – Energy Saver mode, all set to [Maximum Performance].

4. Turn off the low battery notification. This is very important. Low battery level notification – off.

5. Click Apply, OK, then close all computer programs, wait for the battery to fully charge, and make sure the computer is using an external power supply.

6. Unplug the power cord and consume power in the standby state until it is turned off. Then plug in the power cord directly, then turn it on again.

The correction method for the laptop battery is shared here, without using any third-party software, the operation is very convenient! If your laptop battery is always full, try correcting your laptop battery.

How to detect laptop battery life? View laptop battery loss methods

1, first open the computer driver wizard
2. After opening, click to detect the computer driver;
3. Click “Hardware Detection” at the top after checking.
4. Select “Battery Information” on the left;
5, you can see the battery loss of the battery.
The above is the way to check the laptop battery loss. If the user wants to maintain the battery, he can use the power adapter to power on, instead of using the laptop battery to discharge. The laptop battery is a lithium battery, and its life is based on charge and discharge. of.