You may have heard that charging your iPhone overnight is bad for the battery.
According to Battery University, a website run
by the company Cadex, charging your phone when its already fully charged keeps
it in a high-stress, high-tension state, which wears down the chemistry within
and does lasting damage.
Well
ignore that.
In
a brilliant and comprehensive Quora answer, tech author Jesse Hollington tells
you everything you need to know about how your smartphone battery works:
"Charging your iPhone overnight will not harm your battery in the
slightest.
"Charging your iPhone from 90% will
not harm your battery either. You simply can't overcharge an iPhone, or any
other modern electronic device, for that matter.
"Any device that uses a Lithium Ion
or Lithium Polymer battery must incorporate a charging circuit that cuts off
charging power when the battery reaches 100%"
Basically the smartphone battery is as
smart as the phone itself. Apple, Samsung and all the top tech companies -
almost of whose products use lithium-based batteries - use this best practice.
The evolution of the iPhone
And there's more: "Lithium Ion
batteries are rated for a limited number of "charge cycles' (about 500 in
the case of the iPhone), the term "charge cycle" refers to complete
recharges, and partial recharges simply use up partial charge cycles.
"In other words, every time you
charge your iPhone up from 90%, you're using 1/10th, or 10%, of a complete
charge cycle.
"However, if you deliberately drain
your battery to zero and then recharge it, instead of simply plugging it in
when it needs to be charged, you're needlessly using up a complete charge
cycle.
"Obviously if you're using your
iPhone until the battery goes dead, that's fair, but there's no need to
deliberately drain it before recharging it, and you'll actually shorten your
battery life if you do so."
And there you go.
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