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An environmentally safer method of rare earth and other critical material separation and purification using ligand-assisted chromatography for coal, coal byproducts, recycled permanent magnets and Lithium Ion batteries
FISHERS, IN / ACCESSWIRE / February 2, 2021 / American Resources Corporation (NASDAQ:AREC) ( American Resources or the Company ), a next generation and socially responsible supplier of raw materials to the new infrastructure marketplace, today announced that, with the addition of Hasler Ventures LLC, the Company has licensed ligand assisted displacement ( LAD ) chromatography patents and knowhow to further expanded its capability in environmentally friendly separation and purification of rare earth elements. These exclusive patents and technologies, developed at Purdue University, are specific to the processing of separated and pure rare earth metals and critical elements from coal byproducts, recycled permanent magnets and lithium-ion batteries. The agreement
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IMAGE: Graph illustrates an environmentally safer ligand-assisted chromatography method to help produce purified rare-earth metals from waste magnets to ensure a robust supply of critical materials for electronics. view more
Credit: Illustration provided by Linda Wang
American Resources Corp. (NASDAQ:AREC) has acquired exclusive rights to critical rare-earth element separation and purification technologies from Hasler Ventures LLC and Purdue University, officials announced today (Feb. 2).
The environmentally safer method uses ligand-assisted chromatography for separation and purification of rare-earth and other critical elements from coal, coal byproducts, recycled permanent magnets and lithium ion batteries. The technology was developed in the laboratory of Linda Wang, Purdue s Maxine Spencer Nichols Professor of Chemical Engineering.
National company acquires exclusive rights to Purdue rare-earth element innovations, critical for clean energy technologies
Graph illustrates an environmentally safer ligand-assisted chromatography method to help produce purified rare-earth metals from waste magnets to ensure a robust supply of critical materials for electronics. (Illustration provided by Linda Wang)
American Resources Corp. acquires environmentally safer method developed at Purdue to advance clean energy technologies that require rare-earth elements, a market estimated at about $4 billion annually.
FISHERS, Ind. – American Resources Corp. (NASDAQ:AREC) has acquired exclusive rights to critical rare-earth element separation and purification technologies from Hasler Ventures LLC and Purdue University, officials announced today (Feb. 2).
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IMAGE: The proposed anisotropic metasurface from Purdue University innovators has significant potential for high-density optical data storage, dynamic color image display, and encryption. view more
Credit: Alexander Kildishev, Purdue University
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. - Purdue University innovators have created technology aimed at replacing Morse code with colored digital characters to modernize optical storage. They are confident the advancement will help with the explosion of remote data storage during and after the COVID-19 pandemic.
Morse code has been around since the 1830s. The familiar dots and dashes system may seem antiquated given the amount of information needed to be acquired, digitally archived and rapidly accessed every day. But those same basic dots and dashes are still used in many optical media to aid in storage.
Residential village in Purdue’s Discovery Park District progressing
The grand opening for models in the Provenance community is scheduled for early May. (Image provided)
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. – Progress is being made on a major housing development to create a “sense of place” in a walkable, traditional, yet modern community adjacent to the Purdue University campus.
Old Town Design Group of Carmel, Indiana, is the lead developer for the Provenance project. The new urbanist neighborhood development will set center stage for people who seek a quality of life that is adjacent to the energy of a university campus.
Vertical construction is underway, with units ready for move-in this summer.