Battery-bearing devices are detected in the municipal recycling stream using X-ray imaging. | Courtesy of Battery Detection Solutions[/caption]
An emerging equipment supplier uses an advanced type of X-ray imaging to locate batteries in recycling facilities while also aiming to capture data on the overall composition of commodities in the stream.
"You're not just taking one X-ray picture, you're taking, like, eight at once across the energy spectrum," said Rich Cisek, founder and CEO of Battery Detection Solutions, describing multi-spectral imaging. "The ability to do that in an automated way is what allows this whole thing to work."
Cisek says his goal was to go beyond a traditional X-ray machine, which shows certain materials as darker or lighter depending on their density, by having the equipment also indicate what the subject item is made of.
Battery Detection Solutions is one of several companies that uses X-ray technology to identify and sort batteries. Cisek and Jason Nielsen, the company's vice president of customer solutions, discussed the technology and its applications in an interview with E-Scrap News.
[caption id="attachment_25333" align="aligncenter" width="900"]
Battery-bearing devices are detected in the municipal recycling stream using X-ray imaging. | Courtesy of Battery Detection Solutions[/caption]
An emerging equipment supplier uses an advanced type of X-ray imaging to locate batteries in recycling facilities while also aiming to capture data on the overall composition of commodities in the stream.
"You're not just taking one X-ray picture, you're taking, like, eight at once across the energy spectrum," said Rich Cisek, founder and CEO of Battery Detection Solutions, describing multi-spectral imaging. "The ability to do that in an automated way is what allows this whole thing to work."
Cisek says his goal was to go beyond a traditional X-ray machine, which shows certain materials as darker or lighter depending on their density, by having the equipment also indicate what the subject item is made of.
Battery Detection Solutions is one of several companies that uses X-ray technology to identify and sort batteries. Cisek and Jason Nielsen, the company's vice president of customer solutions, discussed the technology and its applications in an interview with E-Scrap News.
Battery-bearing devices are detected in the municipal recycling stream using X-ray imaging. | Courtesy of Battery Detection Solutions[/caption]
An emerging equipment supplier uses an advanced type of X-ray imaging to locate batteries in recycling facilities while also aiming to capture data on the overall composition of commodities in the stream.
"You're not just taking one X-ray picture, you're taking, like, eight at once across the energy spectrum," said Rich Cisek, founder and CEO of Battery Detection Solutions, describing multi-spectral imaging. "The ability to do that in an automated way is what allows this whole thing to work."
Cisek says his goal was to go beyond a traditional X-ray machine, which shows certain materials as darker or lighter depending on their density, by having the equipment also indicate what the subject item is made of.
Battery Detection Solutions is one of several companies that uses X-ray technology to identify and sort batteries. Cisek and Jason Nielsen, the company's vice president of customer solutions, discussed the technology and its applications in an interview with E-Scrap News.
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