can you cite a source that says "new" lithium-ion batteries (same chemistry at work..) won't degrade from heat and aren't susceptible to any damage due to heat?
Interesting topic, IMO. Here and other vapes. A quick look seems to indicate there is cause for concern, in a paper on the latest chemistries (no date, though....) which seems more interested in low temperature performance says "Additionally, battery characteristics deteriorate rapidly at temperatures above 60 C"
http://www.covalentassociates.com/Li-ion Battery Electrolytes Designed For a Wide Temperature Range.pdf
There seem to be some that are better than others, but I'd say it's a valid concern. No telling if/how it was considered in the design of course, but I don't think it can be dismissed.
Heat is bad for batteries. It speeds oxidation which is the #1 killer of batteries. People often think its heat that kills batteries - negative, heat speeds oxidation very rapidly and that's what kills batteries. if you used your battery in a o2 free room for it's life, you would get battery lifetimes toward the decade mark no matter how hot it got.
You can look up articles about lithium nano tube battery technology in the Christian Science Monitor and ASA publications. Other scientists have also done research on the issue of "heat" in the same publications.
This makes no sense to me. How can Oxygen outside a
sealed battery matter? The chemistry involved is going on in the electrolyte inside, right?
Likewise, I think we have to consider the batteries actually being used, not nano tube based lab experiments?
The sleep mode sets the unit to a lower temp as to not vape your material when not in use, but it is also there to conserve battery. It takes way more power to warm up the oven to operating temp from off then from the sleep mode temp.
This too doesn't make sense to me. While it's true that heating from warm to hot takes less power than cold to hot, it takes more power to hold the warm temperature than it would to shut down. Just like it saves money to turn the home heater off, not just down. The lower the standby temperature the greater the savings (down to room temperature).
In broad terms, heat losses are a function of temperature differences, the closer the unit to room temperature, the lower the losses.
What is saved is
time. The maker is trying to make standby less intrusive. If battery savings was the only goal it would shut down like HA and other vapes do. I assume this standby mode also times out?
OF