smartphone line iPhone 16There may be a new feature Apple should release next year A redesigned and more efficient cooling system.
The information comes from former Twitter user X’s user Kosutami, who often has details about prototypes of Apple devices. According to him, “Apple is actively working on a graphene thermal system for the iPhone 16 series to address the pre-existing heating issue,” the release states.
Apple is actively working on the graphene thermal system of the iPhone 16 Series to solve the pre-existing heating problem. The battery of the Pro series would also turn into a metal shell for the same reason.
— Kosutami (@KosutamiSan) 16 November 2023
Although technical details have not been announced yet, this new system control the temperature to prevent the device from reaching high values in degrees CelsiusEven during heavy use of apps or heavy games and during the period of wired or wireless charging.
iPhone heating problems
According to Kosutami, the company is still operating on a battery with a new metal coverThis will also help with heat dissipation and temperature control.
Since the information is about an iPhone prototype, There is not even a confirmation that the system will be adopted in the final version Apple mobile phones.
However, if the rumor is true, this is an indication that Apple is truly committed to resolving the situation, especially after a series of issues found on the iPhone 15.
Some owners of the company’s current generation handsets, especially the iPhone 15 Pro and iPhone 15 Pro Max models, have reported overheating issues and even some cases of swollen battery.
The company blamed the incompatibility error in some heavy applications such as Instagram as the main reason for the temperature increase.
A few weeks later, Apple released an emergency update for iOS that fixed the problem and promised to optimize apps suspected of making the problem worse.
Source: Tec Mundo

I’m Ben Stock, a highly experienced and passionate journalist with a career in the news industry spanning more than 10 years. I specialize in writing content for websites, including researching and interviewing sources to produce engaging articles. My current role is as an author at Gadget Onus, where I mainly cover the mobile section.