Stanford associate professor William Tarpeh and Ph.D. student Samantha Bunke working in the Tarpeh lab. Credit: Bill Rivard/Precourt Institute for...
Vous n'êtes pas connecté
Recycling lithium-ion batteries to recover their critical metals has significantly lower environmental impacts than mining virgin metals, according to a new Stanford University lifecycle analysis published in Nature Communications. On a large scale, recycling could also help relieve the long-term supply insecurity—physically and geopolitically—of critical battery minerals.
Stanford associate professor William Tarpeh and Ph.D. student Samantha Bunke working in the Tarpeh lab. Credit: Bill Rivard/Precourt Institute for...
The Ontario government is investing more than $7 million in 17 projects to drive research, development and commercialization of critical mineral...
Australia-based critical minerals miner Ioneer has been tapped to help strengthen America’s battery supply chain, securing a $1.6 billion loan from...
The mission includes provisions for setting up mineral processing parks and supporting the recycling of critical minerals.
Emergency services have responded to a factory fire after reports that lithium-ion batteries had caught alight in Cheltenham.
Emergency services have responded to a factory fire after reports that lithium-ion batteries had caught alight in Cheltenham.
Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman on Saturday proposed to extend duty exemptions on capital goods used in the production of lithium-ion batteries.
Lithium-air batteries have the potential to outstrip conventional lithium-ion batteries by storing significantly more energy at the same weight....
While improving mineral recycling rates can partially meet the demand, a substantial augmentation in primary production is needed.