As far as I know despite being a single-use item, these vapes mostly contain rechargable battery cells of type 18650. Even though they are probably rather cheap and low quality cells, they still have around 2300 mAh at 3.6 V current. This gives us 8250 mWh per cell. One million of them would be 8250 kWh, enough for 100-200 electric cars. Every day. In a full year that’s 3011250 kWh or around 3 gigawatt hours of storage capacity.
As far as I know despite being a single-use item, these vapes mostly contain rechargable battery cells of type 18650. Even though they are probably rather cheap and low quality cells, they still have around 2300 mAh at 3.6 V current. This gives us 8250 mWh per cell. One million of them would be 8250 kWh, enough for 100-200 electric cars. Every day. In a full year that’s 3011250 kWh or around 3 gigawatt hours of storage capacity.
3 gigawatt hours is the capacity of the number 1 biggest battery-based energy storage system in the world: https://www.energy-storage.news/moss-landing-worlds-biggest-battery-storage-project-is-now-3gwh-capacity/
Tossed in the trash. Only from single use vapes. Every year. And only in the UK.
I hope there’s no major flaw in my calculation but if it’s not, that’s really a crazy figure.
The batteries on most of those cheap disposables are essentially done for by the time the juice runs out.
By day 7 a full charge gets maybe 20-30 puffs.
Without these products the market probably wouldn’t be as flooded with cheap rechargeable batteries that only last about 10 days.
I used to give my empty ones to my niece’s bf, he rips them apart and makes shit with them.
Most single use contain lithium polymer packs, not 18650s, but yes
1000% this. 18650s are used in regular vapes, and they are definitely not cheap to be used in disposables.