Resource Recycling
  • The Latest
  • Analysis
    • All
    • Certification Scorecard
    • Industry Announcements
    • Opinion
    From claims to custody: PCR procurement grows up

    From claims to custody: PCR procurement grows up

    What the NAND flash crunch means for remarketing, refurbishment and residual values

    Telamon acquires ITAD consultancy Retire-IT

    Certification Scorecard — Week of July 6, 2026

    Tech giant pens detailed ‘plastic-free packaging’ guide

    What Google’s latest report means for ITAD

    Unpacking the Starbucks cup data

    Unpacking the Starbucks cup data

    Amazon cutting out more flexible packaging

    Amazon’s AWS hardware reuse is measured

  • Conferences
    • Resource Recycling Conference
    • Plastics Recycling Conference
    • E-Scrap: The Longevity Conference
    • Textiles Recovery Summit
  • Publications
    • E-Scrap News
    • Plastics Recycling Update
    • Policy Now
    • Resource Recycling
    • Other Topics
      • All Topics
      • Brand Owners
      • Critical Minerals
      • Glass
      • Grant Watch / RFPs
      • Markets
      • Organics
      • Packaging
      • Research
      • Technology
      • Textiles
Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
Resource Recycling
  • The Latest
  • Analysis
    • All
    • Certification Scorecard
    • Industry Announcements
    • Opinion
    From claims to custody: PCR procurement grows up

    From claims to custody: PCR procurement grows up

    What the NAND flash crunch means for remarketing, refurbishment and residual values

    Telamon acquires ITAD consultancy Retire-IT

    Certification Scorecard — Week of July 6, 2026

    Tech giant pens detailed ‘plastic-free packaging’ guide

    What Google’s latest report means for ITAD

    Unpacking the Starbucks cup data

    Unpacking the Starbucks cup data

    Amazon cutting out more flexible packaging

    Amazon’s AWS hardware reuse is measured

  • Conferences
    • Resource Recycling Conference
    • Plastics Recycling Conference
    • E-Scrap: The Longevity Conference
    • Textiles Recovery Summit
  • Publications
    • E-Scrap News
    • Plastics Recycling Update
    • Policy Now
    • Resource Recycling
    • Other Topics
      • All Topics
      • Brand Owners
      • Critical Minerals
      • Glass
      • Grant Watch / RFPs
      • Markets
      • Organics
      • Packaging
      • Research
      • Technology
      • Textiles
Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
Resource Recycling
No Result
View All Result
Home E-Scrap

X-ray tech identifies batteries and more

Colin StaubbyColin Staub
November 21, 2024
in E-Scrap
X-ray tech identifies batteries and more
Battery-bearing devices are detected in the municipal recycling stream using X-ray imaging. | Courtesy of Battery Detection Solutions

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.

Facility placement and purity potential

The Arizona-headquartered company, which launched this year, currently offers several designs based on customer application. 

In the municipal recycling world of materials recovery facilities, or MRFs, Cisek says the equipment could be placed on top of the infeed conveyor at the beginning of the sorting process, where it would aim down at the materials moving past. The company produces equipment up to 60 inches wide, sized to customer needs, with the ability to look into a stream that’s 40 inches in depth.

If the goal is to identify batteries, he says it could be positioned before the material reaches that step.

“The better opportunity is, as soon as the truck is unloaded, to put the material through the x-ray, so that you know there are no latent batteries waiting in your pile to burn up,” he said.

The company is also experimenting with truck-mounted X-ray technology. The goal would be to inspect curbside carts as they’re being picked up, and if a battery’s detected, the cart can be left at the curb. That’s “a little trickier,” Cisek acknowledged, but the company is looking at those possibilities as it tries to move as far upstream as possible.

“The only way to eliminate the chance of a fire is to make sure the batteries can’t get in” a facility in the first place, Cisek said. “Once you start sorting things, you risk damaging a battery.”

Additionally, although the company’s name indicates a focus on battery detection, it’s also framing its technology as a way to validate stream purity. Cisek suggested it could be used to evaluate inbound loads of circuit boards in an electronics recycling facility to verify their grade and how much gold they contain.

For commodity verification in the municipal recycling world, Cisek suggested the imaging equipment could be placed on the back end of a sorting line. He offered the example of the X-ray analyzing the fiber stream in a MRF as the material is going into a baler.

“That’s a big differentiator to be able to tell whoever’s buying it, ‘We know it’s 100% pure,'” Cisek said. 

Cisek reiterated the technology his company uses has its roots in the food inspection world, where “the standard for accuracy is immensely high.” The recycling industry has laxer standards for quality, so the company can dial back the purity inspections to some extent, producing less expensive equipment while still providing adequate inspection. Cisek estimated his equipment can provide material discrimination “for within 1-2% of what’s in there.”

Recycling application came from a chance meeting

About five years ago, Cisek, an electrical engineer who was working in the food safety inspection field, began thinking about bringing artificial intelligence into the inspection technology he was developing. Combining AI with other advancements in sensor equipment could significantly increase automation in the inspection field, he thought.

Cisek ended up developing such technology at a company in the food inspection space. After that success, he was talking with venture capital firms about what the next step would be to commercialize the technology in other spaces.

As luck would have it, Cisek was flying back from a meeting in Chicago last fall and happened to notice the person seated next to him on the plane was looking at different inspection technologies on the internet. Cisek recognized some of the equipment.

Cisek struck up a conversation and asked what his seat neighbor was looking for in that equipment. As it happens, his neighbor was on the flight back home from a recycling industry conference.

“And he’s like, ‘Oh man, the recycling industry, we have some real challenges that we don’t really have a handle on,'” Cisek recalled.

From that initial spark, then learning about the battery fires plaguing many sectors of the recycling industry, Cisek began assembling a team that has become Battery Detection Solutions. The company got organized in April of this year, and the team began building prototypes.

Cisek says the proliferation of these battery chemistries indicates the scale of the problem, which only emerged as a major recycling industry challenge six or seven years ago. In some ways, the lithium-ion battery challenge mirrors the CRT dilemma, where regulation lagged behind the mounting volume of problem materials in the waste stream, creating a sector-wide crisis.

“You look at the penetration of consumer goods with lithium-ion – it’s billions, it’s billions,” Cisek said. “And so even if some magic battery comes out tomorrow where people are like, ‘Hey, look, it doesn’t catch on fire anymore when you shred it,’ we’re still going to have a decade and a half of risk around the stuff.”

Tags: BatteriesEquipment
TweetShare
Colin Staub

Colin Staub

Colin Staub was a reporter and associate editor at Resource Recycling until August 2025.

Related Posts

Canada EV battery reuse pilot to start

Canada EV battery reuse pilot to start

byPaul Lane
July 8, 2026

Mapleview Energy is testing the use of older EV batteries to store solar energy gathered on a farm in Fergus,...

Blue Whale Materials announces new CEO, capital backing

byStefanie Valentic
July 7, 2026

Blue Whale Materials just landed a new CEO and a strengthened balance sheet as it races to scale battery recycling...

Rod McDaniel

Westward expansion continues for S3 Recycling

byPaul Lane
July 2, 2026

The company is tripling its California ITAD footprint after its latest acquisition.

Lithium-ion battery recycler to build New York facility

Earthworks acquires metals sorting tech

byPaul Lane
July 1, 2026

The system that’s now owned by Earthworks Industries will help it maximize critical mineral recovery efforts.

Tiger Group offers OCC pulp mill equipment sale

Tiger Group offers OCC pulp mill equipment sale

byTiger Group
July 1, 2026

Sale by Tiger and partner Can-Am Machinery features pulping, drying, baling and other assets from a fiber-processing and pulp-production plant...

Our top stories from June 2021

EV battery recycling market expected to surge

byPaul Lane
June 26, 2026

Grand View Research expects the market to grow more than tenfold by 2033.

Load More
Next Post
Q&A: New RIOS leader brings operations perspective

Q&A: New RIOS leader brings operations perspective

More Posts

Oregon’s Recycling Modernization Act faces injunction

Oregon’s EPR program posts first-year results

July 6, 2026
Two recycled-content bills gain approval in California

California agriculture seeks SB 54 repeal

July 7, 2026
Unpacking the Starbucks cup data

Unpacking the Starbucks cup data

July 8, 2026
In Our Opinion: Coalitions: The EPR Differentiator

Inside NAW’s constitutional case against packaging EPR

July 6, 2026
Tech giant pens detailed ‘plastic-free packaging’ guide

What Google’s latest report means for ITAD

July 8, 2026
EPR fees are a market signal. Here’s what they’re telling you.

Building the infrastructure behind EPR

July 6, 2026
SB 54 draft rules generate debate on rates, review

California increases PET market payments

July 7, 2026
MP Materials breaks ground on rare earth magnet campus in North Texas

ERI confirms ITAD shift toward minerals

July 3, 2026
ITAD firm wins spot for NASA purchasing

ITAD firm wins spot for NASA purchasing

July 6, 2026
Auto Draft

Digital product passports offer gateway into secondary market

July 7, 2026
Load More

About & Publications

About Us

Staff

Archive

Magazine

Work With Us

Advertise
Jobs
Contact
Terms and Privacy

Newsletter

Get the latest recycling news and analysis delivered to your inbox every week. Stay ahead on industry trends, policy updates, and insights from programs, processors, and innovators.

Subscribe

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • The Latest
  • Analysis
  • Recycling
  • E-Scrap
  • Plastics
  • Policy Now
  • Conferences
    • E-Scrap Conference
    • Plastics Recycling Conference
    • Resource Recycling Conference
    • Textiles Recovery Summit
  • Magazine
  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Archive
  • Jobs
  • Staff
Subscribe
This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.