#Industry ·2025-11-27
In the era of information explosion, we refresh our screens every second, but few people stop to think: Where will that palm-sized green circuit board go once it's scrapped? If it's simply incinerated, precious metals will turn into toxic gases; if it's randomly buried, heavy metals will seep into the ground, like a silent slow poison. Therefore, a group of engineers moved their laboratory into the industrial park and let steel and algorithms team up to create a "circuit board recycling device", giving e-waste a chance to be reborn. The entire device is like a silent assembly line, but it hides a storm within. The first step is "ice-breaking" — the double-shaft shredder opens its alloy steel teeth and bites the entire board into palm-sized fragments. The fiberglass emits a crisp cracking sound, like the bells being dismantled in the old era. The second step is "separation" — the high-speed hammering mill separates metals from non-metals at a speed of 3,000 revolutions per minute. The copper foil flies like gold powder, and the resin powder falls like gray snow. The pulse dust removal pipe instantly sucks up the dust, making the air cleaner than that outside the workshop, as if this were not about processing waste, but sifting through the stars. The most exciting part is "sorting". The multi-layered sieves are like terraced fields, with decreasing pore sizes from top to bottom; the high-pressure electrostatic field is like an invisible shepherd, driving the conductive metal particles to one side and pushing the non-metallic debris to the other side. The copper particles fall with a crisp "ding-ding" sound, while the resin powder just silently piles up into small mountains. In just ten seconds, a waste board is disassembled into salable copper powder, tin powder, and resin particles with a purity of up to 99%. They will be transformed into new wires, new phone cases, and even new circuit boards — death is not the end, but a comma in the cycle. The device terminal is connected to an electronic screen, which displays the carbon emission reduction in real time. For every ton of waste board processed, it's equivalent to reducing the mining of two tons of copper ore and the emission of eight tons of carbon dioxide. The numbers jump, like a green heartbeat, reminding operators: they're not just workers, but also "tune-up artists" of the Earth. At nightfall, the factory lights shine like daylight, and the conveyor belts still hum quietly. That sound is like a promise: as long as humans still aspire to be faster, lighter, and smarter, they must learn to let old things tell the future how to move forward more cleanly. The circuit board recycling device is precisely the steel footnote of this promise.
2025-11-28
2025-11-28
2025-11-28
2025-11-28
2025-11-28
2025-11-28
No. 15 Industrial Avenue, Industrial Park, Shicheng County, Jiangxi Province
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