How is wristwatch with 10 years battery life possible?

10 years =~ 87650 hours.
1 uA drain will require 87.75 mAh in 10 years.
With som shelf life degradation that's close enough to
= 10 mAh / uA / year or
= 100 mAh / uA / 10 years

So your cited 163 mAh battery will supply 1.63 uA mean.
Pushing technology, size and luck may get you to say 5 uA mean.

There are 86400 seconds/day. There are 1440 minutes/day.

You will find that eg alarm use is much restricted in the allowable use to get 10 years. If 1 uA of the drain is for alarm use then you get 24 uA.hr/day or 86400 uA.seconds or 86 mA.seconds. That's about 240 mW seconds at 3 V. Or say 5 x 50 mW x 1 second burst/day.

An LED can provide ample lighting at 1 mA. Use it 5 times/day x 1 second = 5 mA.sec = 5000 uA.sec or "only" 5000/86400 = 0.06 uA mean drain. Increase as desired and allowed.

Can you run a time keeping IC on say 1 uA?
Probably yes.

So overall it all falls in the area of "notionally possible if really really really clever and careful".
Casio can be expected to be quite clever by now.

Note that if any sort of energy harvesting is being used then all bets are on. Harvesting a uA or few sounds doable.


REAL WORLD EXAMPLE:

There are many others.

In September 2012 user Hli commented:

An EFM32, which is an ARM Cortex M3 MCU, can run on about 1.45µA while driving a LCD (550nA for the LCD, and 900nA for running the RTC and keeping its RAM). So a chip keeping only time should be capable to run on much less than that

The link he then provided is now broken, so:

EFM32 "Gecko" family are M0+, M3, M4 ARm Cortex microcontrollers from Silabs

Silabs EFM32 search

Wonder Gecko

  • EFM32™ Wonder Gecko 32-bit ARM® Cortex®-M4 Microcontroller Silicon Labs’ EFM32™ Wonder Gecko 32-bit microcontroller (MCU) family includes 60 devices based on the ARM® Cortex®-M4 core, which provides a full DSP instruction set and includes a hardware FPU for faster computation performance.

    Wonder Gecko MCUs feature up to 256 kB of flash memory, 32 kB of RAM and CPU speeds up to 48 MHz. The MCUs incorporate highly differentiated Gecko technology to minimize energy consumption, including a flexible range of standby and sleep modes, intelligent peripherals that allow designers to implement many functions without CPU wake-up and ultra-low standby current. With the lowest active and standby power consumption, the Wonder Gecko is the world's most energy friendly Cortex-M4 MCU.

Other xxx-Gecko variants M0+, M3, M4

Digikey listings of "Gecko" - legion

Lowest cost in 100's with LCD EFM32TG822F32-QFP48T$US2.03/100 Digikey

Lowest power useful mode with RTC running - EM2 - deep sleep

In EM2 the high frequency oscillator is turned off, but with the 32.768 kHz oscillator running, selected low energy peripherals (LCD, RTC, LETIMER, PCNT, LEUART, I 2C, LESENSE, OPAMP, WDOG and ACMP) are still available. This gives a high degree of autonomous operation with a current consumption as low as 1.0 µA with RTC enabled. Power-on Reset, Brown-out Detection and full RAM and CPU retention is also included.

EM1 - sleep

In EM1, the CPU is sleeping and the power consumption is only 51 µA/MHz. All peripherals, including DMA, PRS and memory system, are still available

EM0 - running

In EM0, the CPU is running and consuming as little as 150 µA/MHz, when running code from flash. All peripherals can be active.

So running in EM0 for 1 ms/s adds 0.15 uA to the EM2 standby load.

Overall, operating in EM2 at around 1 uA mean plus EM0 as required would allow the 10 years / 163 mAh example target to be met.

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Energy harvesting:

Vibration and motion may well be possible energy sources.

A silicon solar PV/solar panel seems viable.
Very roughly power available is 150 Watts/m^2 at 1 sun = 100,000 lux.
A 10mm x 10mm "panel" at 10 lux at those ratings would provide ~= 150 Watt x (0.01m x 0.01m) x 10lux/100000lux = 15 microWatt.

10 lux is dim roomlight - at the level where colour fades into monochrome. Dim!
If that level of sensitivity can be maintained at such low light levels (as it quite possibly can with other 'chemistries') the light powering looks viable.


Perhaps those watches use some kind of energy harvesting system to recharge a rechargeable battery?

An automatic quartz watch has an energy harvesting mechanism that, like a mechanical self-winding watch, pulls small amounts of energy from the day-to-day motions of the person wearing it.

A solar-powered watch uses a tiny solar cell to pull energy from ambient light. (Even indoor light, much dimmer than sunlight, is adequate to keep the watch running).

I hear that such watches typically run normally for a day or so when cut off from outside power (taken off the wrist, put in a dark room, etc.). Then they enter low-power state where everything is turned off except internal timing -- the LCD display goes blank, the hands stop. The watch has a power reserve that can keep internal timing going for at least a month; one manufacturer claims it has watches with a 4 year power reserve. Then when you pick it up and shake it, the battery starts to charge up, and the "hands will magically spin to match the current time." ( a ).

Are you looking for detailed information on how it's possible to build electronic devices with extremely low power consumption? Then you might enjoy reading Jeelabs's notes on low power electronics ( b ). One JeeNode has run for over 2 years on a single battery charge (charged on August 21st, 2010; still running and continuing to count on Sep 15, 2012). ( c )

Or are you looking for techniques to keep a battery from failing prematurely? While recharging a battery many times over 10 years is "easier" than trying to get a primary cell to last 10 years, it doesn't make it "easy". I've bought new rechargeable batteries for several consumer electronics devices when the original rechargeable battery went dead in less than 5 years -- not merely drained, but completely dead. (What makes this especially frustrating is when 5-year-old equipment uses batteries that are some special shape that stopped production years ago and are now unavailable, and I suspect all the shiny new oddly-shaped batteries will likewise be unavailable in 5 years.). How to keep batteries from failing prematurely would make a good separate question -- I wish I knew the answer.


The key here is that it has no sweep second hand. The minute hand is incrementing only once every 20 seconds and that's the only movement that's occurring to the hands.