Samsung's probe into its Galaxy Note 7 fiasco has found that the overheating and burning of the phones was caused by faults with their batteries.
The firm had axed its iPhone rival in October last year after an earlier botched recall and re-release.
The recall is thought to have cost $5.3bn (£4.3bn) and was hugely damaging for the South Korean firm's reputation.
On Monday, Samsung said that neither software nor hardware were at fault, only the batteries.
Internal and independent investigations "concluded that batteries were found to be the cause of the Note 7 incidents", the South Korean technology giant said in a statement .
The company said that errors both in design and manufacturing affected batteries by two different manufacturers.
According to the findings, the problems centred on insufficient insulation material within the batteries and a design that did not give enough room to safely accommodate the batteries' electrodes.
Samsung said it was "taking responsibility for our failure to ultimately identify and verify the issues arising out of the battery design and manufacturing process".
The smartphone giant did not name the battery suppliers during their Monday presentation, though last year had identified them as their affiliate Samsung SDI and Chinese company Amperex Technology.
Samsung said it did not plan to take legal action and that it accepted responsibility for asking the suppliers to meet certain specifications.
"Samsung has done what they needed to do for now but the true test will need to happen over time," analyst Bryan Ma of IDC told the media.
"If successive products can be delivered consistently without incident in the next year or so, then they will be in a better position to regain consumers' trust."
Launched in August 2016, Samsung's Note 7 device was marketed as a large-screen top-end device and positioned as a rival to Apple's iPhone.
But in September, Samsung had to recall about 2.5 million phones after complaints of overheating and exploding batteries.
The firm insisted that all replaced devices were safe. However, that was followed by reports that those phones were also overheating.
Samsung Note 7 - how events unfolded
24 August: The first report of a Note 7 "exploding" appears in the news, soon followed by images of more smouldering Samsungs.
2 September: Samsung announces a voluntary global recall of 2.5 million Note 7 phones, citing faulty batteries . It offers refund or replacement.
8 September: US aviation authorities and many airlines tell passengers not to turn on or charge the phone on planes.
9 September: The US Consumer Product Safety Commission tells people to stop using the phone and on 15 September issues a formal recall .
5 October: Reports emerge of a replacement Note 7 overheating on a US flight. In the following days more reports appear and major US carriers stop selling the device or issuing replacements.
11 October: Samsung permanently stops production of the Note 7. It tells people to turn them off and stop using them.
Since then: With some users still hanging on to their phones , Samsung pushes out updates that limit or prevent charging.
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