Science & technology | Lithium production

Two new ways of extracting lithium from brine

How to increase the supply of an increasingly valuable metal

Tomorrow’s batteries today

AROUND 60% of the world’s lithium, a metal in high demand for making batteries, comes from evaporation ponds, like that pictured overleaf, located in deserts in Argentina, Bolivia and Chile. These ponds, which can have individual areas of 60km2 or more, are filled with lithium-rich brine pumped from underground. That brine, as the ponds’ name suggests, is then concentrated in them by evaporation, after which it is treated to purge it of other metals, such as sodium and magnesium, and the lithium is precipitated as lithium carbonate.

This article appeared in the Science & technology section of the print edition under the headline “Filter feeders”

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