Circu Li-ion cofounder and CEO Antoine Welter says his startup’s upcycling machine can diagnose batteries in seconds. “We know exactly which cell can be reused and which one can’t,” he told TechCrunch on Monday.
Circu Li-ion is in the business of saving usable battery cells from shredders. The German startup’s machine identifies batteries by their appearance, via AI and a growing battery library; it separates cells from other materials, such as plastic housing and PVC boards; and it determines the cells’ states of heath.
Cells in great shape might go to use in mobility. When their condition is so-so, they might go on to store renewable energy. And cells that don’t make the cut go to a recycling facility.
Recyclers usually shred cells into black mass and recover valuable metals via smelting or leaching. Tons of components get mixed together and lost in the process.
“There’s a lot of valuable materials that we can take away that don’t need to land in a shredder,” said Welter. Circu Li-ion claims that “more than eight out of ten cells in an end-of-life battery are actually not end of life.”
Circu Li-ion charges manufactures and recyclers to use its machines and software. It also operates a facility in Karlsruhe, Germany, where it disassembles batteries.
In their past lives, so to speak, Welter worked as a B2B investor and consultant, while co-founder and CTO Xavier Kohll helped produce a “soft total artificial heart” at ETH Zurich, a Swiss research university.
Earlier this month, Circu Li-ion secured about $4.8 million (€4.5 million) in equity financing led by BonVenture, on top of around $4.2 million (€4 million) in earlier grants from the European Innovation Council Accelerator.
The startup said the combined $9 million or so in seed funding would help it scale its machine-as-a-service business model. Circu Li-ion said it also intends to build the “world’s largest” repository of battery recycling data.
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