Inspirational appetizers with curated news on startups, emerging trends and bleeding-edge research

Gone forever

Technology

Rare components in batteries can be sustainably recovered.

Recycling long-life materials such as PTFE still represents a challenge. But a research team in Japan has found a way to convert PTFE into reusable, organic fluorine compounds.

The team exposed the material to a 5 Mega Gray dose of electron beams in a heated environment of 370°C. Treatment that caused the polymer to fully decompose, breaking down the ‘forever chemicals’ into fluorine- and carbon-based gases.

These could then be reused. Compared to procedures like pyrolysis which uses temperatures of 600°C to 1000°C, energy consumption per ton of PTFE was roughly halved. Meaning a reduction of approximately 859kg of CO2.

Canada has also been concentrating on removing ‘forever chemicals’ from water.

Share the inspiration

Previous article
Next article

More Chillipicks In This Category

Stay Connected

Your headstart thanks to the newsletter

Sign up for our regular newsletter to receive the inspiration directly into your inbox on Fridays. Providing you with positive news on innovation and fresh perspectives that spark ideas. Not to forget – these cool topics make for warm-hearted conversations.

Related Chillipicks