• Eheran@lemmy.world
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    1 年前

    What an odd headline. Was that mine lost and they stumbled upon it again? Or did they discover new deposits?

      • MentalEdge@sopuli.xyz
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        1 年前

        A “mine” would suggest there is already infrastructure.

        If you just found some new place with a ton of lithium, it’s not a mine until you actually build all the stuff around it to get it out of the ground.

        You can’t “find” a mine, unless you already built one, and then forgot it existed.

  • naturalgasbad@lemmy.caOP
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    1 年前

    What are the odds China actually extracts from it? Seems like lithium batteries are soon going to become a dead tech with the rise of sodium-ion batteries.

    • ninjan@lemmy.mildgrim.com
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      1 年前

      Lithium is still going to be king in small batteries, i.e. for appliances, laptops, phones, toys etc and those uses are only growing and won’t be replaced by Sodium-Ion unless we see even more breakthroughs there and none in Lithium-Ion.

    • CalcProgrammer1
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      1 年前

      Sodium ion sounds like a very promising battery tech for a lot of things due to sodium’s abundance and ease of access, but it’s less energy dense than lithium so I still see lithium battery tech being king in most applications where battery size and weight matter - portable electronics and EVs mostly. Sodium ion tech sounds best suited for grid-scale energy storage, home backup/solar batteries, and other such applications where cost is more important than size or weight.

    • T4V0@lemmy.pt
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      1 年前

      Seems like lithium batteries are soon going to become a dead tech with the rise of sodium-ion batteries.

      They are? As I understand it, sodium-ion batteries have lower energy density and smaller lifespan. They will probably fully replace lead-acid batteries and will be used as substitute for lithium batteries in vehicles and others similar scenarios due to their hazardous nature.