When Nokia recently asked people what the most important thing was to consider when creating a new cellphone, the top answer, with 38%, was a long battery life. It’s easy to understand why. An amazing smartphone without any power is about as useful as a brick. Sometimes we forget that, in the past, batteries were almost the size of a brick, too. To remind ourselves just how lucky we are to get our days of talk time, we decided to check out how much batteries have evolved over the years.
The Nickel-Cadmium or NiCad battery
In 1987, Nokia launched its first handheld mobile phone, the Mobira Cityman. This beauty may have cost four and a half thousand dollars, but it still took six hours to charge and packed just a single hour of battery life. The reason the talk time was so poor? The Nickel-Cadmium or NiCad battery. Barely half the size and weight of the first rechargeable battery technologies ever commercialized in the 1800′s, the NiCad was not only large and heavy, but suffered from the Memory Effect. The meant that it had to be fully used up before being recharged, otherwise it would remember the shortened charge cycle and last for even less than an hour. It was also hot and changed shape when you used it for a longer time. Add to that the toxic nature of cadmium, and it was clear something better was needed.
Nickel Metal Hydride or NiMH battery
Thankfully, that something better turned up in 1989. The culmination of two decades of research, the Nickel Metal Hydride (NiMH) battery was thinner, lighter, non-toxic, and delivered a higher capacity in relation to its size and weight. Although it was still prone to the Memory Effect, you only had to completely discharge the battery after every 20th recharge. They also took less time to charge, and gave much more talk time. Unfortunately they still got very hot, as anyone with a cellphone in the early 90’s will remember. And they still changed shape.
Lithium Ion or Li-Ion battery
The battery that really revolutionized everything was the Lithium Ion or Li-Ion battery. First made commercially available in 1991, in 20 years of development the Li-Ion performance has improved nearly five fold. Without this technology, it would have been impossible to transform chunky cellphones into pocket-sized smartphones. The Li-Ion is thinner, lighter and typically provides 30% more standby and talk time than NiMH batteries of the same capacity. It doesn’t suffer from the memory effect so it no longer needs to be emptied before recharging. What’s more, all the components are environmentally safe.
Lithium Poly Ion or Li-Poly battery
But the search for longer talk time and a shorter recharge time continues, and since 2008 there’s been a new contender on the block. The Lithium Poly Ion battery or Li-Poly offers up to 40% more battery capacity than the NiMH battery of same size and is totally free of the memory effect. And because they don’t need a cell casing, they’re ultra light. Downside? They’re ultra expensive too.
The relentless quest for better, more innovative ways to power our cellphones continues. But in the meantime, what do you do to get the most out of your battery, be it a NiMH, Li-Ion or Li-Poly? If you have any top tips, we’d love to hear about them in the comments below.






steve
May 26th, 2011 at 10:30 am
can u please describe the cost of li-poly batteries …. Can there be a replacement done for a bl – 5c battery of nokia wiith a li – poly battery ….. Please reply as soon as possible
Nitish Kumar
May 26th, 2011 at 10:30 am
that's why nokia decided to go for 1200mAh in place of 1500mAh? Amazing evolution…. Less battery for more requirements. Great…
jak
May 26th, 2011 at 16:46 pm
could you give high efficiency solar charger in Nokia phone's accessory ?
or it isn't available in my country !
with this charger any one can charge any where !
at least o/p of 1 A !
Nokia Nseries
Jun 2nd, 2011 at 19:28 pm
Jak, we'd love a solar power charger too. Not that it would be much good for six months of the year that there's no sun! As soon as one comes out we will be sure to let you know.
Thanks for sharing your thoughts, Reporta. You clearly know your stuff when it comes to the world of batteries.
Christian
May 26th, 2011 at 17:08 pm
And what about transparent Solar Collector direct on the screen ? I've heard about this before this year !
Great on bigger touch screen !
Sadabahar
May 26th, 2011 at 19:26 pm
Ya , we need a battery which lasts for long take a shorter time 2 recharge.
Asvani Kumar
May 27th, 2011 at 12:55 pm
hello my great nokia….i love my nokia 2700c very much…n want new nokia 2700c music edition..it may posible??????????
Reporta
May 27th, 2011 at 13:07 pm
Nice sum up. But you missed two important points:
1) The specification for the batteries went down from 1500mAh to 1200mAh, although the requirements for energy are higher
2) Li-Ion/Li-Po are temperature sensitive and more prone to failure
2.1) In cold or hot environments NiMh still performs normal as opposed to LiIon/LiPo. By heavily using the battery (happens on my N8 all the time) the LiIon/LiPo gets drained even faster, since it is so dependant upon a normal (25°) temperature.
2.2) From a customer point of view the NiMh is like a Jeep as opposed to a Porsche. It doesnt give that much speed and small form factor, but it is nearly indestructible. If a LiIon/LiPo is completely drained (why ever this could happen) its broken. It has only 1000 recharge cycles and looses energy at 600 up onward. Also every cycle counts, not a full recharge, but every time I plug it in! The NiMh does NOT have a memory effect, it only "counts" full charges, but delivers less energy for weight/bulk.
For a consumer buying every two yrs a new mobile that aint a bad thing, but for the environment it sucks.
batterykemist
May 27th, 2011 at 15:53 pm
Nice article but was missing a viewpoint on the corresponding evolution of the voltage platforms the phones operated on. Nokia deserves alot of credit for being the first to get to a "3.0 volt" platform enabling the use of single cell Li-ion (nominal 3.7V) in the first place. That put Ericsson and Motorola at the time in a big disadvantage becase they were still using "4.0V" platforms that required 4x NiMH cells.
Also, just a comment here that the polymer battery was actually introduced by Ericsson in the flagship T28 in 1999 and continued to be implemented in future Ericsson products from there by the millions per year…by 2008 polymer batteries were already being made by the 10's of millions per Month…
Nokia batteries through the years, and Mango multitasking
May 28th, 2011 at 06:10 am
[...] of Friday links of interest. Firstly, the Nseries blog guys have put together a nice little piece looking at the various battery technologies used by Nokia over the years, from Ni-Cad to Li-Poly – interesting to see just how much more efficient the modern cells [...]
Nokia batteries through the years, and Mango multitasking | PDF File Search Engine | Free Download Ebooks PDF – TurboDownload.Net
May 29th, 2011 at 14:59 pm
[...] Nseries blog guys have place together a good tiny square looking at the several battery technologies used by Nokia over &#11…, from Ni-Cad to Li-Poly – [...]
Aatif
May 31st, 2011 at 15:03 pm
I don't get something. Nokia's 1500mAh batteries (BL-5C i think) were pretty big. My Galaxy S's battery is also 1500mAh but is WAY WAY smaller. Why is that so?
Sarah Farrukh
Jun 2nd, 2011 at 17:27 pm
Please describe the cost …..
Iain
Jun 7th, 2011 at 18:52 pm
And it didn't even have "Snake".
Ralph
Jun 12th, 2011 at 16:25 pm
I found the Nokia Energy Profiler on the betalabs site. I've used it to find out how much power gets used with different phone settings & apps.
I find Wifi the big power user. With wifi on & my e71 imap email connected, minimum power use is 0.05W. With wifi off power use is 0.02W.
orlando
Aug 11th, 2011 at 01:40 am
make a battery that last 2 times more then the usual
that means find those two metals that then charged don't use up too much energy stored or have a solar panel on the back a small one so it can charge while in the sun if required and YES PUT BETTER CAPASITY BATTERIES in your phones please 1200mah is not strong enough specially for power users