Mr. Doug
Fulcher reports
OWL ANNOUNCES ENGAGEMENT WITH UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA AND THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA IRVINE TO EXPAND ITS R&D TESTING TOWARDS DLCE PILOT PLANT
One World Lithium Inc. has engaged the University of British Columbia (UBC) and the University of California, Irvine (UCI), to work alongside with
Moleaer Inc., the global leader in nanobubble technology to continue and accelerate the research and development (R&D) work on the company's single-step direct lithium carbonation extraction (DLCE) technology.
Moleaer is in the process of assembling two separate nanobubble generators for shipping to the universities, along with the additional equipment required to continue the DLCE test work, with the objective of advancing the technology toward the design and construction of a containerize pilot plant for field testing of lithium in a brine. This equipment is expected to be delivered within the next six to eight weeks for set-up in the two labs to begin the DLCE test work.
Scope of work
Primary project goals --
advancing toward pilot-scale development
A
statement of work has now been completed that outlines the focus of work to be carried out by UBC and UCI.
The first phase of the R&D work is on continued validation and optimization of the DLCE process, which uses a nanobubble extraction process using carbon dioxide (CO2)
to separate lithium from brines with the objective of advancing toward the design and construction of a pilot plant for field testing. The pilot system is intended to demonstrate the potential for direct production of lithium carbonate from natural brines.
In parallel with lithium carbonate production, UBC and UCI will also be evaluating the potential recovery or co-production of additional industrial carbonates from brine, including sodium, calcium, magnesium and potassium. These materials, if successfully recovered at scale, could represent incremental revenue streams and improve overall project economics.
The second phase of the laboratory work is to complete test work on lithium clay to
create an effective lithium slurry to validate the DLCE technology to produce a lithium carbonate from the clay slurry under a variety of conditions. This process would
enable
lithium carbonate generation
directly from slurries made from clays, without requiring sulphuric acids, soda ash, sorbents and multiple concentration steps.
University of British Columbia
The UBC team will be led by Dr. Alex Tavasoli, an assistant professor in UBC's department of mechanical engineering, who will oversee the design and fabrication of the testing facilities for the extraction of lithium carbonate and other metals from brine using One World Lithium's proprietary CO2 nanobubble extraction processes.
Dr. Tavasoli
received her BASc in chemical engineering and PhD in materials science and engineering, both from the University of Toronto, and completed her postdoctoral training at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Chemical Engineering. She joined UBC as an assistant professor in 2024. Her research group, the Laboratory of Future Industry (LoFI), conducts holistic research into the design, optimization, scale-up and commercialization of novel sustainable industrial production processes and energy systems that rely on various interfacial phenomena for their performance.
Prior to joining UBC, she held roles in new product introductions at Agfa and in the cleantech (clean technology) practice at the MaRS Discovery District and ran a start-up company called Solistra, which aimed to scale up solar-driven chemical processes. She has received a number of Canadian cleantech industry awards, including being named a Clean50 Emerging Leader.
University of California, Irvine
The UCI team will be led by Dr. James Earthman, a professor from the University of California, Irvine, who will also
oversee the design and fabrication of the testing facilities for the extraction of lithium carbonate and other metals from brine using One World Lithium's proprietary CO2
nanobubble extraction processes.
Dr. Earthman
is a professor of materials science and engineering and biomedical engineering at the University of California, Irvine. He received his BS in materials science from Rice University and his MS and PhD in materials science and engineering from Stanford University. Dr. Earthman's research activities include studies of a broad range of deformation and damage mechanisms in both man-made and biological materials, the development of systems for novel quantitative diagnostics of material characteristics and integrity, and the management of materials using nanobubbles. In 2022, he was a distinguished summer faculty fellow at the Naval Research Laboratory in Washington, D.C., for his research on nanobubbles. He has written and co-written over 120 peer-reviewed research publications, including two chapters on biomaterials and tissue engineering and two chapters in materials handbooks published by ASM International. He has also served as editor for three books in the fields of materials science and
biomedical engineering. He is an inventor on 16 issued U.S. patents, several international patents and pending U.S. patents. He is also co-founder of Perimetrics Inc., a diagnostic device company headquarters in Seattle, Wash. In 2023, he was elected fellow of ASM International.
Doug Fulcher, president and chief executive officer, commented:
"We are extremely pleased to have such a talented team working with us in advancing OWL's DLCE technology. We believe that, under the direct supervision of Dr. Earthman with his background in
research and management of materials using nanobubbles
and Dr. Tavasoli's background in chemical engineering and industrial production processing and alongside the expertise of Moleaer's
nanobubble
team, we are in a position to fast-track our DLCE process for lithium and other critical mineral extraction from brine and complete the construction of a container size test plant in a timely manner."
Process advantages under evaluation
Unlike traditional methods that typically produce lithium intermediates requiring additional downstream chemical processing to generate lithium carbonate, the company's objective is to produce lithium carbonate directly in a single-step process.
Carbon utilization and environmental considerations
By integrating carbon dioxide in the separation chemistry and minimizing chemical inputs and concentration stages, One World Lithium expects, subject to further testing, reduced environmental impacts, lower capital and operating costs, and potential carbon credit opportunities pending pilot validation.
About
One
World
Lithium
Inc.
One World Lithium is developing proprietary lithium extraction technologies and pursuing strategic partnerships to commercialize lower-impact, scalable lithium production from brines and clay slurries.
We seek Safe Harbor.
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