Scientists are revolutionizing e-waste recycling by extracting gold with eco-friendly methods and transforming CO2 into valuable chemicals.
Researchers at Cornell University have created a sustainable method to extract gold from electronic waste and use it as a ...
As more electronic devices can store information, secure and proper destruction of the device’s data has become an immense ...
E-waste can be especially dangerous to our environment due to the toxic chemicals found within electronics. The typical ...
Cornell researchers have developed a groundbreaking method that uses gold recovered from e-waste to convert CO2 into useful ...
What if your discarded electronics could not only recover gold but also help combat climate change by transforming CO2 into ...
E-waste recycling is an important part of the Economy in developing countries and is key to increase the sustainability of electronic devices that often rely on the exploration of rare earth elements.
What makes this approach so revolutionary is its dual impact: reducing e-waste while advancing clean energy solutions.
Cornell University researchers have developed a breakthrough non-toxic material that extracts 99.9% of the gold from ...
The Agbogbloshie e-waste site in Accra has become infamous worldwide as one of the largest and most toxic e-waste dumps on ...
TechWaste Recycling launches its Future Innovators Scholarship program, inviting students to propose innovative electronic ...