5 Tips to Extend Battery Life on your Smartphone

Battery

Smartphone Batteries don’t last forever, and certain devices have a screen time that is almost embarrassing. Those big, luscious AMOLED and LCD screens and taxing apps are an obvious drain on your battery, but to make your Android last longer, there are plenty of things you can do behind the scenes. Let’s explore how to improve your smartphone’s battery.

Working of Batteries

First, some backstory: there is either a lithium-ion battery or a lithium-polymer battery on most smartphones. However, both are simply lithium-ion, and as such do not have a ‘memory,’ which ensures that from any stage you can charge them – you don’t have to discharge them entirely before charging them up – and you wouldn’t have to fill them all the way to 100 percent.

These types of batteries actually suffer from low-voltage issues, so it’s actually easier to charge them partially (say, from 20 percent to 90 percent) than to charge them entirely and drain them completely. However, battery care is still up for discussion, because there will be someone for each agreed tip who says it makes no difference. Only find the ones that work for you and you can increase battery on your Android device.

Most gadgets published nowadays do not have removable batteries, to our chagrin. It seems like it’s not going to improve anytime soon. And they still need to be optimized, especially for demanding new games, despite most of them being close to 3,000 mAh. Take advantage of any of the following tips to really get the most out of your smartphone.

Tips to Extend Battery Life on your Smartphone

1.Using a Black Wallpaper on your Smartphone

Use a dark-colored background if your phone has an AMOLED screen (like most Samsung devices). Black wallpaper will improve battery life since only the colored pixels are illuminated by AMOLED screens. Black pixels are not illuminated, because the darker pixels you have, or the darker pixels, the less power it takes to illuminate them.

  • Tap the link here to download a totally black wallpaper.
  • Now, save your image and go to your settings.
  • From there, pick the wallpaper and scroll down to the gallery.
  • The black wallpaper you just saved should be available for you to search.
  • Hit set to lock the screen and wallpaper.

2. Doze Mode

Since Android Marshmallow, Doze mode has been around but has been expanded with newer versions of Android. Doze would operate beforehand only if the smartphone had been stationary for a while. But now, as it’s being passed around, it can also function (in your bag or pocket when you’re on the go, for example). The computer just has to be switched off to work.

In essence, Doze mode only shuts down stuff that you don’t need, depending on how long it’s been since you touched your phone. Network communication is disconnected and syncing only occurs at specific times. More items are avoided, such as GPS, Wi-Fi scanning and all syncing, when you are away from your phone for longer.

3. Turning Off Google Assistant

Stop your phone from always listening. Google Assistant is a fantastic and often very functional feature. The problem is that it can wreak havoc with your battery. Especially if you don’t actually use it or only use it occasionally.

Go into Google>Search from your Settings menu and tap Google Assistant>Settings heading. On the next page, select your device and toggle off Google Assistant for longer battery life

4. Keep your Apps Updated

Keep upgrading your apps. Developers are constantly upgrading apps for a reason, and it’s for memory or battery optimization most of the time. Also, keeping the software updated means you have the best possible optimizations. Similarly, delete old apps you no longer use, so background processes that chew up RAM and battery life might be running.

You should go through them individually once you have checked that your applications are up-to-date and check if they are designed for battery life. This can be accomplished very rapidly. Only go to Settings and tap the Battery button. Hit the menu button from there (three dots at the top right of your screen) and go to Optimize the Battery.

5. Use Greenify

Greenify actually works, unlike many Android apps that claim to improve performance and boost battery life. When they are not in use, Greenify lets you bring other apps into hibernation, stopping them from running in the background.

This frees up device energy and improves the efficiency of batteries, but takes a little thought. You can’t just hibernate any installed app so that Greenify is effective. But this is a useful tool because there are a lot of Android apps that perform acts that you don’t know about, or necessarily like.

Smartphone Batteries

Have we missed anything? What are your top tips for saving batteries? In the comments, tell us about them.

Also Read: What is an SSD? Learn What it Is and Why You Need One

Dave Daniel: Dave Daniel has been a Freelancer and Blogger for the past 3 years and is now the proud owner of The Tech Vamps. He has Expertise in the Areas of Technology, Science, Gaming, Gadgets, Hacking, Web Development, etc.