bcla
On our rugged Eastern foothills.....
- Joined
- Nov 28, 2012
- Messages
- 25,715
We designed our cells using NiMH exclusively (thermally stable and doesn't have the exothermic potential of Li-ion), but in large format (45Ah to 85Ah). As a domestic manufacturer, we had to go through Asia for sourcing some of the base materials for cell construction. There was also licensing from Ovonics who most major NiMH battery manufacturers needed to pay a usage fee. Needless to say, Ovonics/BASF knew me very well and wanted to know what markets I was in.
With that being said, cell improvement often comes via materials development. Electrolyte, separator and even carbon nano-tubes are some areas that can increase energy and/or power densities.
Of course, we're talking here about a low-end economical, commodity battery that can be purchased easily online. It's apples and oranges.
I believe the consumer grade AA NiMH battery has probably been maxed out in terms of performance. And the Eneloops (or relabelled from Sanyo/FDK production) I've had over the years have been great. I've had one here or there that failed, but for the most part I've got ones I've been using for 6-10 years that are still fine. I also generally don't use up their capacity, so that's probably helped. I have about a half dozen wireless computer mice that use a single AA, and I'll usually put a charged one in after a week or two. I've heard that some prefer the low capacity ones for that purpose, but I've never really seen them.