What to do with your old phone? INL's E-RECOV might have the answer CMI research led to the technology described in this story from Idaho National Laboratory: What to do with your old phone? INL's E-RECOV might have the answer
American Rare Earths partners on DOE-funded R&D, drills at Wyoming, Arizona projects American Rare Earths partners on DOE-funded R&D, drills at Wyoming, Arizona projects
Recycling International: Commercial opportunity for water-based rare earths solution Recycling International ran the Ames Laboratory story about commercialization for a rare earth recycling technology developed by CMI
India Education Diary: Ames Laboratory: green rare-earth recycling goes commercial in the US India Education Diary ran the Ames Laboratory story about commercialization for a rare earth recycling technology developed by CMI
Green rare-earth recycling goes commercial in the US An innovative method of recycling rare earth elements from electronic waste has gone commercial
Two CMI technologies named 2021 R and D 100 Award winners Two technologies developed by the Critical Materials Institute (CMI) won 2021 R&D 100 Awards in the Mechanical Devices/Materials category. R&D World announced the top 100 scientific innovations of the year, as selected by independent panel of more than 50 judges representing R&D leaders in a variety of fields.
Idaho National Laboratory wins four R&D 100 Awards Idaho National Laboratory wins four R&D 100 Awards, including one developed by CMI researchers at INL for RE-Metal
Phys.org: New, environmentally friendly method to extract and separate rare earth elements CMI researchers at Penn State and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory identified a new method to improve extraction and separation of rare earth elements from unconventional sources. The method could eventually be scaled up to help develop a domestic supply of rare earth metals from industrial waste and electronics due to be recycled.
Penn State News: New, environmentally friendly method to extract and separate rare earth elements CMI researchers at Penn State and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory identified a new method to improve extraction and separation of rare earth elements from unconventional sources. The method could eventually be scaled up to help develop a domestic supply of rare earth metals from industrial waste and electronics due to be recycled.
ORNL licenses rare earth magnet recycling process to Momentum Technologies CMI researchers at Oak Ridge National Laboratory developed a process that can help recover magnets from used computer hard drives, which was licensed to Momentum Technologies