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Recyclable Phone Batteries Are Now A Reality

Recyclable Phone Batteries Are Now A Reality

Waste is Becoming an Increasingly Important Issue

The disposal of trash and waste is unsurprisingly a mess worldwide. Many problems exist within the structure of trash disposal, with recycling being often neglected in many areas, inconsistent and underdeveloped trash removal infrastructure, and the lack of any trash disposal facilities.

This means it’s relatively common worldwide to see actual rivers of trash.

A component of this issue that is growing daily is the increasing problem of electronic waste, otherwise known as e-waste. E-waste is the garbage created after electronic devices are thrown away after being used.

E-waste makes up anything electronic that goes into the landfill, and the reason this is so problematic because these devices often contain hazardous and toxic chemicals that eventually make their way into our land, water, and atmosphere.

Of the e-waste that is created, 10% of it is made up of cell phone batteries. This specific component of cell phones is increasingly a problem. Beyond the issues I described above, cell phones and other electronics are burned, releasing these dangerous chemicals and creating new ones.

However, many of these issues could be circumvented just by making easily recyclable phone batteries. This is how it could work.

Why Hasn’t This Been Done Already?

One of the major obstacles preventing cellphone batteries from being recycled commonly is that lithium-ion batteries are quite challenging to recycle or reuse.

However, there are many other ways to create cellphone batteries, and one of these ways could present itself as the way forward to create sustainable personal cellular devices.

The RMIT School of Engineering in Australia developed this new recyclable phone battery. The design primarily uses a material called Mxene, a material similar to graphene commonly used in electronics like traditional, not-so-recyclable phone batteries. The primary reason why Mxene isn’t already found in most cell phones is that it rusts easily, which hampers conductivity.

Compared to graphene or lithium-ion batteries, Mxene rusts much quicker, but this property ironically could be the very thing that extends the device’s life. Using sound waves to “brush” off the rust, the researchers estimate that they can extend a conventional phone battery’s life span by three times and create truly recyclable phone batteries.

Hossein Alijani, a Ph.D. student at the university and co-lead researcher of the project, said, “Current methods used to reduce oxidation rely on the chemical coating of the material, which limits the use of the MXene in its native form, in this work, we show that exposing an oxidized MXene film to high-frequency vibrations for just a minute removes the rust on the film. This simple procedure allows its electrical and electrochemical performance to be recovered.”

 

The Future is in Recycling

Reducing waste, period. It is one of the most critical issues facing us. However, in the meantime recycling the waste we are creating is the best solution to the massive amounts of garbage contaminating our planet.

As we continue to move into a world in which electronics play an increasingly important role in our daily lives, we must abandon the disposable electronic-use model. Creating easily removable and recyclable phone batteries is a challenge that is necessary for us to overcome.

With developments in technology like this becoming more common, we will soon see a world without contradiction between electronics and environmental sensitivity. As part of this movement, MXene recyclable phone batteries appear to be the latest and most promising solution to this problem that we have created.

 

 


 

 

Source Happy Eco News

Sri Lanka launches countrywide E-waste collection project

Sri Lanka launches countrywide E-waste collection project

Post offices around the country will collect E-waste starting from October 5 to October 11 to prevent harmful materials being released to the environment by recycling the discarded electronic devices.

Minister of Environment Mahinda Amaraweera told reporters yesterday that the programme will be launched under the theme “A country that breaths, Sri Lanka without E-waste,” to coincide with Postal Day.

E-waste will be collected from all 653 main post offices around the country starting from October 5 to October 11 from 8 am to 5 pm.

Amaraweera said that the Ministry has understood that the harm done by E-waste to the environment is higher than by other types of waste because there are no proper methods to effectively recycle this type of waste in Sri Lanka.

Amaraweera said E-waste poses the risk of releasing dangerous materials such as Lead, Mercury, Cadmium and Arsenic which are harmful to the environment.

Moreover, he said that there is a rapid increase of E-waste in the country in recent years as more and more people are using and disposing of electronic devices.

He added that in the case of mobile phones users discard their old phones as the latest model comes on the market.

“There are more mobile phones than people in the country. No one has an idea of what is happening to the discards,” he said

The Minister said that the government expects to recycle some of the E-waste materials such as Iron, Aluminium and plastic which could be recycled in the country, while other materials which cannot be dealt with in the country will be sent overseas.

The recycling process within the country will be given to institutions which are registered under the Central Environmental Authority (CEA) which will also supervise the process.

The items that will be collected at the main post offices are as follows:

TV, Cassettes and radio, fans, desktop and laptop computers, mobile phones and accessories, fixed telephones, fax machines, grinders, blenders, toners, rice cookers, printers, batteries, air conditioners, washing machines, CD and DVDs, DVD players, electric kettles, electric heaters, electric stoves, electronic sports items, electronic exercise machines, CFL machines, CRT monitors and other electronic devices.

The items which will not be collected are:
Refrigerators, tube lights, electronic devices which have been broken to parts or devices where internal parts are removed, devices covered in sand and mud, large scale E-waste from industries and shops.

 


 

By Imesh Ranasinghe

Source: Economy Next