Engineers at MIT have developed a new electrochemical process to extract lithium from brine, a breakthrough that could fundamentally reshape the supply chain for electric vehicle batteries.
The team’s method replaces traditional, water-intensive evaporation ponds with an electrochemical cell that selectively pulls lithium ions from mineral-rich water. By using a specialized membrane and a controlled electrical current, the system isolates lithium while leaving behind other impurities like magnesium and calcium.
The implications for the auto industry are immediate. Current extraction methods, particularly those used in the “Lithium Triangle” of South America, can take up to two years to produce a batch of lithium. The MIT process cuts that timeline down to a matter of hours.
“This isn’t just about speed,” says the lead researcher on the project. “It’s about decoupling production from the geography of massive, inefficient evaporation ponds.”
Cost remains the primary barrier to mass EV adoption. Lithium prices have historically been volatile, often driven by the high overhead of mining and the slow pace of current recovery techniques. By lowering the energy requirements and accelerating the production cycle, this new system could offer a way to stabilize costs for battery manufacturers.
The process also addresses the environmental footprint of lithium mining. Traditional evaporation relies on thousands of acres of land and consumes millions of gallons of water, often at the expense of local agricultural communities. The MIT researchers designed their system to operate in a closed loop, significantly reducing the environmental impact and allowing for extraction in regions previously deemed unsuitable for mining.
While the technology has proven successful in laboratory settings, the next phase involves scaling the hardware for commercial use. The team is currently working with industrial partners to pilot a modular, container-sized version of the system that can be deployed directly at existing brine sites.
If the pilot programs mirror the lab results, the bottleneck in battery production may finally have a solution—one that doesn’t rely on slow, century-old evaporation techniques.
