Button cell
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Button cell
A watch battery, button cell, silver button cell, or coin cell is a small form-factor battery designed for use in wrist watches, pocket calculators, hearing aids, and similar compact portable electronics products. They are compact and have long life. Examples are mercury oxide and silver oxide cells. A mercury oxide cell has a mercury oxide cathode and a zinc anode. Watch batteries are usually a single cell with a nominal voltage between 1.5 and 3 V. Common anode materials are zinc or lithium; common cathode materials are manganese dioxide, silver oxide, carbon monofluoride or copper oxide. The cylindrical sides of these types of batteries is part of the positive (+) terminal.
Type designationInternational standard IEC 60086-3 defines an alphanumeric coding system for watch batteries. Electrochemical systemThe first letter identifies the electrochemical system used in the battery, which also implies a nominal voltage:
The "C"-type 3-V lithium cells are today the most commonly-used type in quartz watches, calculators, small PDA devices, and computer motherboard clocks. Package sizeIts package's size is identified by a three-to-four digit code, preceded by the letter "R" to indicate a round cell. The first 1?2 digits indicate the outer breadth of the battery (in millimeters, rounded down), and the last two digits indicate the overall height (in tenths of millimeters, rounded down). Examples:
ISO/IEC 83-3 lists the following diameter codes:
The following height codes are used with 16?24 mm diameter batteries:
Final lettersAfter the package code, the following additional letters may optionally appear in the type designation to indicate the electrolyte used:
An appended letter "W" states that this battery complies with all the requirements of the IEC 86-3 standard for watch batteries. Other package markingsApart from the type code described in the preceding section, watch batteries should also be marked with
The manufacturing date can be abbreviated to the last digit of the year, followed a digit or letter indicating the month, where O, Y, and Z are used for October, November and December, respectively (e.g., 01 = January 1990 or January 2000, 9Y = November 1999). Common applications
Rechargeable variantsRegular watch batteries are not rechargeable. Rechargeable button cells are commercially available, but are not commonly used due to their inferior capacity or higher self-discharge. Also, watch batteries are usually used in low-power devices where battery replaced very rarely so there is no big benefit from using rechargeable batteries but higher self-discharge rate and lower capacity could make using rechargeable batteries impractical. However it is worth to admit that as of 2008 there are some commercially available rechargeable watch batteries anyway, usually intended to replace CR lithium batteries in devices with relatively high current consumption. Other chemical compositions
See alsoReferences
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