{"id":318778,"date":"2017-05-13T11:00:43","date_gmt":"2017-05-13T11:00:43","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/citifmonline.com\/?p=318778"},"modified":"2017-05-13T11:00:43","modified_gmt":"2017-05-13T11:00:43","slug":"smartphones-that-charge-in-five-minutes-could-arrive-next-year","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/citifmonline.com\/2017\/05\/smartphones-that-charge-in-five-minutes-could-arrive-next-year\/","title":{"rendered":"Smartphones that charge in five minutes ‘could arrive next year’"},"content":{"rendered":"
Smartphones with batteries that fully charge in five minutes could be available to consumers next year.<\/p>\n
The technology was first shown off in 2015, when Israeli start-up StoreDot demonstrated its FlashBattery at the CES tech show in Las Vegas.<\/p>\n
Chief executive Doron Myersdorf told the BBC it is now expected to enter production in early 2018.<\/p>\n
However, Ben Wood, a technology analyst at CCS Insight, said he had doubts about the claims.<\/p>\n
Mr Myersdorf said he could not reveal which manufacturers were signed up to use the technology.<\/p>\n
In 2015, he told the BBC his firm’s battery contained materials that allowed for “non-traditional” reactions and the unusually fast transfer of ions from an anode to a cathode – the electrical process that charges a battery.<\/p>\n
The design involves nanomaterials, which feature extremely small structures, and – unnamed – organic compounds.<\/p>\n
Some versions of the battery were thicker than most smartphone batteries at the time, but now Mr Myersdorf has claimed it is ready for the market.<\/p>\n
“We will charge a smartphone in five minutes,” he said.<\/p>\n
He added that the technology was in pilot production at two Asian battery makers and that “mass production” was expected to commence in the first quarter of 2018.<\/p>\n
‘Remain sceptical’<\/strong><\/p>\n Mr Wood, while remaining unconvinced whether the rollout would happen as quickly as claimed, did admit that if the battery worked as planned, then it could be a major moment in the industry.<\/p>\n “Taking risks with battery technology can bite you,” he told the BBC. “I would say that experience has taught me to always remain sceptical. Let’s see if it happens would be my view.”<\/p>\n He pointed out, for example, that any design that generates large amounts of heat can impact the performance of the battery.<\/p>\n However, he added that anyone who did manage to crack the “battery problem” could have a transformational effect on consumer electronics.<\/p>\n Other manufacturers are also working on quick-charging battery tech.<\/p>\n In November, Qualcomm announced its Quick Charge 4 system, for example, that offers five hours of battery life following a five-minute charge.<\/p>\n