American Manganese Corporation will cooperate with the U.S. Department of Energy to carry out a lithium battery material recycling project

by:CTECHi     2021-07-24

On March 28th, American Manganese Inc. (stock code 'AMY') announced that the company has become a member of the Critical Materials Institute (CMI) and will cooperate with the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) to develop lithium for electric vehicles. Ion battery material recycling project.

The project is officially named 'Li-ion battery disassembly, remanufacturing and lithium and cobalt recovery projectDevelop a development strategy for the use of terminal lithium battery materials. The project is led by (CMI), which is supported by the establishment of the US Department of Energy, the Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, and the Office of Advanced Manufacturing.

'AMY is very pleased to be the first private company to participate in this project,' said Larry Reaugh, CEO of American Manganese Corporation. 'We are honored to cooperate with world-renowned national laboratories and leading universities in the United States, which will greatly satisfy our growing demand for battery materials such as lithium, cobalt, manganese and nickel'

According to the data, the American Manganese Company is mainly engaged in the recovery of metals from lithium-ion batteries such as cobalt, lithium, nickel, manganese and aluminum, and can extract 100% battery-grade purity cathode materials. Its partners include US national laboratories:

Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL): ORNL is located in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, and is the largest multidisciplinary science in the DOE system And the National Laboratory for Energy.

Idaho National Laboratory (INL): Located in Idaho Falls, Idaho, the national leading nuclear energy research and development center in the energy system, national security , Work on science and environment.

Purdue University and Case Western Reserve University are also project partners.

Previously, American Manganese also announced that the company’s processing partner KemetcoResearch’s pilot plant has begun to pass the first and second phases of cathode material recycling, and the final phase is expected to achieve lithium Battery recycling.

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