So with a tablet as an always-on display, what’s the best way to power it?
I can automate, for example, switching the mains power on when the battery drops to a certain level, and off again after recharging to a certain level. Or I can just leave the mains on all the time, so the battery will remain permanently full.
If I cared about battery life, which would be better?
I’ve not been able to find the specific source I’m referring to in this post but I recall seeing a study a few years ago that concluded that for optimal battery health/longevity, lithium ion batteries should avoid being charged to 100%, 80-90% is better, and should not be discharged below 50%. Lead acid are different and other lithium-based batteries may also differ.
In practice for devices I care to preserve the battery health of, I avoid charging above 80% as much as possible unless I need that extra 20%. For a phone, sometimes exceeding this range is unavoidable but for a wall-mounted tablet you’ll only occasionally remove for short periods, I’m sure even starting at 50% battery it would be fine for the duration of use.
Exactly the consensus I’ve researched as well. My Galaxy tablet once asked me if I wanted to enable battery life extension by stopping charging at 90% (it would then show that was fully charged). I accepted the suggestion. Anyways I keep all my wall panel tablets between 50 and 90%.
The “best” or less stressed for an Lithium-Ion or Polymer battery is 50% - why is that? Because of chemistry! The level of electrons between the cathode and anode are mostly equal which is the perfect state to store a Li-Ion battery
When it is about charge and discharge the extreme ends in both directions putting maximum stress on the battery, so getting the last 20% out of a battery or topping it up the last 20% is degrading the battery faster. Again it’s the chemistry!
Another thing to avoid (if someone wants long lasting batteries) is fast charging as this degrades batteries faster
With the previously linked solution from @3ATIVE it is easy to have the desired charge level on your phone even if the manufacture doesn’t want you too!
Also extra slow charging (the opposite of fast charging) like only 0.1 or 0.2C can drastically increase round-trip energy efficiency (or simply avoid losses)
Very interesting info. I suppose then the absolute “ideal” range would be keeping the charge % somewhere between 40 and 60%? This only really applies if you have constant charging on-hand. If you’re out and about potentially without an outlet (like a phone often is) charging it to 90% would be worth the trade off of reduced battery health (although still better than 100% charge)
I also have a new Samsung tablet and enabled the 85% charge limit. Is this enough to maintain battery health and prevent overheating, or should I also use a smart plug to manage charging?