
The full name for Lithium-manganese batteries is Lithium-manganese dioxide (Li-MnO2) . In an electrolytic cell, lithium metal is used as the anode. In a primary cell, the anode is the negative, electrons flow from the negative to the positive, and current flows from the positive to the negative. In an manganese dioxide cell, the anode is connected to the positive, it is the anions in the solution that oxidize at the anode. Corresponds to the cathode. Lithium-manganese batteries use a lot of lithium button batteries (we called them mercury batteries early on, but they have been gradually replaced by lithium-manganese formulas because of pollution and capacitance) with a base voltage of 3.0 V and a very high capacitance of up to 1,200 mah. The battery can be designed to be thin, short and high capacity. Plus the discharge curve is stable, so many high-tech products such as motherboards use it as a backup battery for memory. In addition, lithium-ion batteries designed to be cylindrical have high capacity, low internal resistance, and can deliver high current instantaneously, making them a good choice for the camera battery market. However, because of the high chemical activity of its raw metal lithium, it is not advisable to use more than one battery to avoid the risk of explosion.