Gadget Review on MSN
Japan achieves 90% lithium recovery in EV battery recycling breakthrough
Japan achieves 90% lithium recovery from EV batteries, doubling industry standards and cutting carbon emissions 40% through ...
While electric vehicles make up a larger share of the new cars on roads every year, helping to decrease the total amount of ...
Craig has worked in automotive media for nearly 20 years, producing content for publications ranging from Autoline and AutoGuide to Roadshow by CNET and EV Pulse. Aside from writing, he’s also ...
LEMONT, Ill.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Argonne National Laboratory has recently launched a collaboration with Toyota Motor North America that could reduce the nation’s ...
At HANNOVER MESSE, around ten companies will jointly present the "Battery Use Case" showcase. This will bring EV battery cell production to life and demonstrate a fully networked value chain from the ...
It isn't easy to recycle high-voltage batteries from electric cars, but Porsche wants to take a stab at it. The plan: extract raw materials from old EV batteries to make fresh ones for its own ...
A new process is to recover valuable raw materials from used batteries. It already works in the lab, and a large pilot plant ...
Mercedes-Benz opened an in-house battery recycling plant. The facility will produce enough materials to make 50,000 new battery modules annually, the company says. EV battery recycling is a niche but ...
Altilium secures £18.5M to expand EV battery recycling and build a circular supply chain for lithium-ion battery materials in ...
Several disposable batteries in a recycling bin. - CHUYKO SERGEY/Shutterstock No matter how advanced batteries become, they still run out of energy eventually, or otherwise lose their ability to store ...
Two United Kingdom-based companies, Altilium, a clean technology group focused on supporting the transition to net zero, and Enva, a recycling and resource recovery specialist, have partnered to ...
In the MeGaBat project, researchers at Fraunhofer IFAM in Bremen, Germany, are developing an electrochemical process that ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results