Could Grinding Up Lithium Batteries Help Recycle Them?
Researchers recovered lithium from batteries on a small scale by using mechanical force
Katharine Sanderson is a freelance journalist based in Cornwall, UK.
Researchers recovered lithium from batteries on a small scale by using mechanical force
The Nord Stream pipeline explosions happened in a dumping ground for chemical warfare, but other contaminants proved most toxic to marine life
Bailouts mean customers’ deposits are safe, but the Silicon Valley Bank’s demise has sparked concern about future investment in small tech companies
Making buildings part of a circular economy that minimizes the waste of materials could yield huge environmental rewards
The question of how to preserve athletic performance amid extreme heat, including at the World Cup in Qatar, is pressing as climate change bites
Researchers are rushing to calculate the greenhouse-gas emissions resulting from mysterious leaks in major gas pipelines that connect Russia to Europe
Most of the people mourning the death of Queen Elizabeth II were not close to her—research can shed light on the nature of their grief
Study aimed at collecting DNA from 10,000 autistic people and their families has drawn criticism for failing to consult the autism community
As women’s soccer, rugby and other sports gain popularity, scientists are racing to understand how the female brain responds to head injury
Automated clipping together of modular building blocks shows promise for the discovery of new drugs
Our little-known ability to see infrared light could occur when pairs of photons combine their energies to appear as one "visible" photon
A simple chemical reaction is used to power a robot's lofty leaps. Applications could be search-and-rescue operations
The technique could be sensitive enough to detect the structure of a single protein
An online project seeks crowd-sourced help to reproduce chemists' published results
A device based on scattered silver cubes could scale up light absorption for solar power
A coating has been found to help hot metal hang onto a protective vapor layer that prevents explosive boiling
A polymer network made of alginate and polyacrylamide is the most resilient yet and could be used in replacement cartilage or scaffolding for artificial organs
Plastic Logic will try to sell its relatively expensive technology to other companies that might want to use it in their own products
A neuropathic pain expert says, however, that in the past 30 years virtually no new drug targets have made it into the clinic as effective pain-relief drugs
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