• Flying SquidM
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    919 months ago

    China won’t be pleased about that. They were predicted to control a third of the world’s lithium within the next few years.

  • halfempty
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    549 months ago

    Better than exploiting other countries, I suppose. But I think Lithium is a transitional battery source, and that we will move to much more efficient designs within a decade.

    • Art35ian
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      849 months ago

      Not a chance.

      Right now we’re using lithium-ion. In maybe a decade we’ll move to lithium-sulphide, and in perhaps 25 years we might see lithium-oxygen.

      Either way, lithium is all you’ll see in commercially viable batteries for the next 50 years because lithium as an anode is as good as it gets on the Table of Elements.

      Yes, you’ll see 100 reports per year about new battery tech but none of them will ever be scalable, safe enough, or cheap enough.

      • @IndefiniteBen@feddit.nl
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        9 months ago

        I mean, this kinda only applies to devices that need the highest energy density.

        For situations where space isn’t much of an issue, it can make more sense to use other forms of batteries that are cheaper per MWh. I agree Li-ion won’t be replaced in phones etc. but for some applications that are stationary, it can make commercial sense to use something else.

      • @InvertedParallax@lemm.ee
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        219 months ago

        We’ll be moving bulk storage to molten sodium over the next 3 decades, lithium will be for high density applications, but they’re working on sodium-air designs because the density is even higher than lion.

      • @conasatuta@lemmy.world
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        169 months ago

        Lithium is the most energy dense so most suitable for private transport but I think industrial and domestic storage won’t be dominated by lithium in a decade or 2

        • @grue@lemmy.world
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          4
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          9 months ago

          If you want to do something like that, just get a car with a diesel engine and run biodiesel in it. No need to wait for new tech; an old '90s or early-2000s VW TDI (for example) is perfectly suitable.

          • Flying SquidM
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            19 months ago

            It was a joke. Every so often some article comes out about how scientists have made bio-batteries. They never go anywhere.

            • @grue@lemmy.world
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              59 months ago

              Yeah, I get it.

              You know what’s not a joke, though? Biodiesel. People talk about how we need new car technology to stop global warming, but my car was carbon-neutral a decade ago…

              • @AA5B@lemmy.world
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                29 months ago

                There was never enough source to scale up very far. People need to eat a lot more fried food to create several orders of magnitude more used cooking oil

                • @grue@lemmy.world
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                  9 months ago

                  It’s a good part of the solution, along with EVs and the biggie, which is to fix the zoning code so that cities can be built with walkable density and people don’t have to drive as much in the first place.

                  Also, there are more waste feedstocks available than just used vegetable oil. For example, the biodiesel I’d get was made from rendered chicken fat. (I use past tense, by the way, only because my car has been sitting for longer than I care to admit because I haven’t finished replacing the transmission. The TDI engine running on biodiesel is great, but sadly, the rest of the car is still a VW…)

        • @NotMyOldRedditName@lemmy.world
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          9 months ago

          Were still going to need lithium batteries for longer ranges for quite awhile.

          Sodium Ion/LFP can get up to 160wh/kg right now, which is fine for things like the standard range cars or commuter cars, but when you want the longer range vehicles they’re to big/heavy compared to the 250-300wh/kg of the lithium ion batteries using nickle.

          I’m sure they’ll keep improving them, but so will the lithium ion ones. Maybe LFP/Sodium make it to 250, but nickle make it to 400-450.

          Then you gotta consider weight differences and what not and the impact on efficiency so it’s not neccesarily end game if they reach the mid 200’s.

          I’m super excited to see the continued improvements in these lower power density batteries though. They’re going to make the transition a lot easier as not everyone will want a longer range vehicle, and they’re more sustainable.

          And of course, for storage where density doesn’t matter, they’re amazing.

          Edit: Oh and once we get into the cost effective 400-450+ range, we can start transitioning flight as well, so we’ll still need it then as well.

    • Carlos Solís
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      19 months ago

      There are a few promising leads in sodium, graphene, and liquid hydrogen batteries. And yeah that includes salt batteries as well

  • Dulce Maria
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    329 months ago

    The volcanic crater is found along the Nevada-Oregon border.

    The Lithium Americas Corporation “expects to begin mining in 2026. It will remove clay with water and then separate out the small lithium-bearing grains from larger minerals by centrifuging. The clay will then be leached in vats of sulfuric acid to extract lithium.”

  • elouboub
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    249 months ago

    Now all they need is some poor immigrants to work on extracting it and they can make fat stacks

    • @Grimy@lemmy.world
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      119 months ago

      Why bring in immigrants when we have hundreds of children yearning for hard work and life building experiences.

      • elouboub
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        19 months ago

        Is that the state where they signed into law that the work hours of children could be extended?

        along the Nevada–Oregon border

  • @Tilgare@lemmy.world
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    219 months ago

    There’s also 32 million metric tons in Niland, California that can be harvested with green energy. I assume the same could be done with this deposit. Could be very good for domestic battery production and cost.

      • HuddaBudda
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        369 months ago

        It means we don’t have to go to the Congo or through Russia, China, or others anymore. Which is a pretty big political relief because it means that we have a little bit more resource independence.

        Maybe even a way we could compete on the global market if we play our cards right.

        If they’re smart, they’ll use it to beef up our power grid for the global warming shock.

        Unfortunately, I imagine @poopa_mo is right, and this is just going to beef up someone’s bank account. Or rot in a warehouse.

        • @Spiralvortexisalie@lemmy.world
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          89 months ago

          Most Lithium comes from South America and Australia and has for some time. I do not believe that Lithium has ever had the geopolitical issues that other rare earth metals such as cobalt have had.

          • @jonne@infosec.pub
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            49 months ago

            Yeah, the difference between lithium and oil is that oil is a consumable. If the price of oil goes up, that has an instant effect on energy/transportation costs. If the price of lithium goes up, it’ll only affect the price of new batteries, and anything that’s already in use is unaffected. It’ll slow down investments in new projects, people might delay the purchase of a new car, etc, but it’s a way smaller economic impact.

        • @frezik@midwest.social
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          39 months ago

          There’s no good reason to use lithium for utility-scale power storage. We need it for transportation because it has the best power compared to its weight. Utility storage doesn’t care as much about weight, and there are plenty of better options.

        • TheWoozy
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          29 months ago

          The best way for it to beef up someone’s bank account is for us to play our cards right and use it to compete on the global market.

    • htrayl
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      129 months ago

      China owning the vast majority of raw lithium is not the world you want to live in. The world absolutely benefits from a greater spread of lithium sources.

  • @Fades@lemmy.world
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    149 months ago

    If this works out and is feasible it would be something of a game changer and would weaken some of our international dependencies