Samsung SDI to invest $128M to improve battery safety

Following Samsung's statement as to the cause of the Galaxy Note7's untimely death, the company's battery and energy storage subsidiary Samsung SDI has announced measures it's already taken and plans to implement in the future to ensure the unprecedented high-profile recall doesn't happen again.
Samsung Galaxy Note7 Samsung SDI is going to invest KRW 150 billion ($128 million) in expanding infrastructure for improving battery safety. The company has already installed an emergency situation room at the Cheonan plant and also established a task force to deal specifically with battery safety immediately after the recall was announced in September. The task force team includes 100 people from three divisions - development, production and technology, and quality and verification.
The safety measures start from the development process where design precautions are being taken to prevent the compression of electrolytes. At the production stage X-ray inspection on all products ensures a one in a million chance of defects, previously unattainable by sampling methods. Sampling is employed at the next stage, quality and verification of finished products, but the number of samples has been increased 1000-fold to span millions of cells.
The actions seem to be working, judging by the company statements that smartphone manufacturers have increased their orders for polymer batteries from Samsung SDI, to the point of returning to pre-Note7 levels. Samsung's next smartphones are likely to be using in-house batteries too.
Source | Via

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Samsung Galaxy Mega 5.8 I9150

How Need for Speed Rivals Competes With Other Next-Gen Racers

The Elephone "Vowney" has a QHD display and 3GB of RAM for $299 and it runs Windows 10 Mobile

Samsung has detailed its October security patch

The Best PS4 Hard Drive

New Nexus 7 2013 now on sale for £149.99 in the UK