Lithium batteries exported to Europe require CE certification.
Battery exports to the EU require CE certification. The EU has relevant requirements for battery safety and environmental protection. CE Certification: The CE certification of the battery mainly concerns the EC Electromagnetic Compatibility (EMC) Directive. EN/IEC 6133 Test: Testing battery safety requirements, such as continuous charging, dropping, collision, forced discharge, temperature cycling, external short circuit, etc. European Battery Directive 2013/56/EU: stipulates limits for heavy metals lead, cadmium and mercury in batteries.
Goods including lithium batteries may receive one or more CE elements, such as Protection Directive, EMC Directive, RoHS Directive, Radio Equipment Directive or other directives . In CIn this case, the buyer follows the relevant CE instructions and affixes the CE marking to the product.
Lithium battery:
Lithium battery is a type of battery that uses lithium metal or lithium alloy as the positive electrode material /negative and uses a non-aqueous electrolyte solution material. Lithium metal batteries were first proposed and studied by Gilbert N. Lewis in 1912.
In the 1970s, M. S. Whittingham proposed and began studying lithium-ion batteries. Since the chemical properties of lithium metal are very active, the processing, storage and use of lithium metal are subject to very high environmental requirements. With the development of science and technology, lithium batteries have become mainstream.
Lithium batteries can be roughly divided into two categories: bed batterieshium metal and lithium-ion batteries. Lithium-ion batteries do not contain metallic lithium and are rechargeable. The fifth generation product of rechargeable batteries, lithium metal batteries, was born in 1996. Its safety, specific capacity, self-discharge rate and performance-price ratio are better than those of lithium-ion batteries.