California bans the sale of new gas-powered cars by 2035

UpAndComing

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an organization or industry contributing to the high toxic emissions making climate change worse is the enemy.

Lithium batteries are an important component of Electrical Vehicles

Environmental Impacts of Lithium-Ion Batteries

"Lithium mining in Andean countries is carried out using saline water. Even though it is not suitable for drinking, the absence of saline water can significantly impact water and environmental resources.

One ton of lithium requires a staggering 2.2 million gallons of water. More than half of the water in Chile's Salar de Atacama has been used by mining activities in the region, significantly impacting local farmers.

. The explosion of gases generated by electrolyte leakage causes a substantial share of LIB safety issues, whereas minor damage to battery packs is often impossible to detect.

LIB electrolytes are mostly made up of difficult-to-detect volatile and redox neutral solvents such as methyl ethyl carbonate (EMC), vinyl carbonate, or dimethyl carbonate (DMC). "



The amount of media brainwashing alot of ya'll have is :pachaha:
 

mykey

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Batteries have to be replaced every 70k miles. Those batteries and battery acid (hazardous material) end up in a landfill and/or ocean at some point.

Lastly, brace yourselves for yet another round of destabilisation for countries in Latin America and Africa that produce most of the resources needed to power "green" energy.
 

1thouwow

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Lithium batteries are an important component of Electrical Vehicles

Environmental Impacts of Lithium-Ion Batteries

"Lithium mining in Andean countries is carried out using saline water. Even though it is not suitable for drinking, the absence of saline water can significantly impact water and environmental resources.

One ton of lithium requires a staggering 2.2 million gallons of water. More than half of the water in Chile's Salar de Atacama has been used by mining activities in the region, significantly impacting local farmers.

. The explosion of gases generated by electrolyte leakage causes a substantial share of LIB safety issues, whereas minor damage to battery packs is often impossible to detect.

LIB electrolytes are mostly made up of difficult-to-detect volatile and redox neutral solvents such as methyl ethyl carbonate (EMC), vinyl carbonate, or dimethyl carbonate (DMC). "



The amount of media brainwashing alot of ya'll have is :pachaha:

Batteries have to be replaced every 70k miles. Those batteries and battery acid (hazardous material) end up in a landfill and/or ocean at some point.

Lastly, brace yourselves for yet another round of destabilisation for countries in Latin America and Africa that produce most of the resources needed to power "green" energy.
So y’all don’t expect the technology to advance and get more efficient? :ohhh:
 

1thouwow

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AJD

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Slippery slope but surface level thinking fool ain't gonna think critically enough why, they just gonna be like fantastic the government really care about tackling climate control.:unimpressed:
 

null

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This is more about conserving natural resources than being environmentally friendly. Electric car production still leaves a very large footprint environmentally. These aren't solared powered cars, Producing electricity and batteries still produces chemical waste.

for now ...

it is multi-stage.
 

MenacingMonk

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shyt is dumb as fukk. They're already bytching about the power grid. Fix that shyt to keep up with what's to come. Need to come up with other ways to power a vehicle instead of electric too. :comeon:
 

bnew

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So y’all don’t expect the technology to advance and get more efficient? :ohhh:

Battery made of aluminum, sulfur and salt proves fast, safe and low-cost​

By Michael Irving
August 24, 2022



Engineers at MIT have developed a new battery design using common materials – aluminum, sulfur and salt. Not only is the battery low-cost, but it’s resistant to fire and failures, and can be charged very fast, which could make it useful for powering a home or charging electric vehicles.

Lithium-ion batteries have dominated the field for the last few decades, thanks to their reliability and high energy density. However, lithium is becoming scarcer and more expensive, and the cells can be hazardous, exploding or bursting into flames if damaged or improperly used. Cheaper, safer alternatives are needed, especially as the world transitions towards renewable energy and electric vehicles.

So the MIT team set out to design a new type of battery out of readily available, inexpensive materials. After a search and some trial and error, they settled on aluminum for one electrode and sulfur for the other, topped off with an electrolyte of molten chloro-aluminate salt. Not only are all of these ingredients cheap and common, but they’re not flammable, so there’s no risk of fire or explosion.

In tests, the team demonstrated that the new battery cells can withstand hundreds of charge cycles, and charge very quickly – in some experiments, less than a minute. The cells would cost just one sixth of the price of a similar-sized lithium-ion cell.

They can not only operate at high temperatures of up to 200 °C (392 °F) but they actually work better when hotter – at 110 °C (230 °F), the batteries charged 25 times faster than they did at 25 °C (77 °F). Importantly, the researchers say the battery doesn’t need any external energy to reach this elevated temperature – its usual cycle of charging and discharging is enough to keep it that warm.

Although the type of salt in the electrolyte was chosen because it has a low melting point, it coincidentally has another benefit – it naturally prevents the formation of dendrites. These metal tendrils, which gradually grow between the two electrodes until they cause a short circuit, are a major hurdle for batteries, particularly lithium-ion cells.

The team says that this battery design would be best suited to the scale of a few dozen kilowatt-hours, like powering an individual home from renewable sources. They could also be useful as charging stations for electric vehicles, thanks to their rapid charging. Other types of batteries, such as a recent design using molten salt electrolyte and aluminum and nickel electrodes, could work better at grid scale.

The patents for the aluminum-sulfur batteries have been licensed to a spinoff company called Avanti, co-founded by one of the authors of the study describing the design. The first order of business is to build it at scale, and run it through stress tests.

The research was published in the journal Nature.

Source: MIT
 

east

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glad i don't live in a country cursed with cobalt or lithium reserves

chile and argentina haven't been destabilized by america in a while, now they're either gonna become client states like ksa or get the iraq/syria treatment :lupe:

 
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