Redwood materials have been in extension tears in recent years-the growth that has expanded the recycling of lithium ion batteries and the starting footprint of materials far beyond Carson City, the Nevada headquarters as it locks Agreements with Toyota, Panasonic and GM, began to build a factory in Europe.
And yet, the Redwood CTO Colin Campbell materials saw a gap in the workforce of the company’s 1,100 people. San Francisco was the answer, Campbell told TechCrunch, a long -term veteran Tesla who got the top technology point in August 2023.
The company, founded by former Tesla CTO JB Straubel, fills this gap with a new San Francisco Research and Development Center. The installation of the 15,000 square feet located in the city’s design area is equipped with laboratory to support engineers who will eventually work at each point in the battery ecosystem, from chemical engineering and descent science to software and electrical. This work could help improve descent production, an important element of the Redwood business, which created revenue of $ 200 million in 2024.
The center, which Redwood moved about a week ago, has only a handful of engineers on the hotel. But Campbell expects that he will eventually employ about 50 or more people.
“We had a very good year and we had a lot of revenue,” Campbell said, adding that the company was limited by its ability to expand. “And what limits our ability to expand the team is the hiring, we just have to expand the opening of where we can hire and San Francisco was a reasonable place for a bundle of different reasons.”
High in the list is a deep talent talent of the engineers and software located in the vagina, he added.
Lithium -ion batteries contain three critical building blocks. There are two electrodes, one rise (negative) on one side and a descent (positive) on the other. Usually, an electrolyte sits in the middle and acts as the courier to move ions between the electrodes during charge and discharge. Foils, which represent more than half of the cost of a battery cell, contain lithium, nickel and cobalt. Redwood is able to capture all these materials through recycling and battery processing.
But Redwood aims to do more than recycling. The start, which has increased more than $ 2 billion in private capital, creates an end to end battery ecosystem that touches the full life cycle of lithium -ion batteries at each stage, including recycling, refinement and reconstruction as well as evaluation.
Campbell is particularly willing for engineers to work in developing equipment for Redwood factories.
“An important part of it because (factories) is difficult to build in the US is that the US does not have the industrial base to make a bundle of this mechanism and in particular to make new and cost -effective machinery,” he said. “Thus the new processing equipment engineer is a big part of it.”
Lab engineers will also operate on diagnostic batteries to help understand the health of a battery that Campbell believes could benefit another part of the business.
“I think it’s important to start with the foundation of the business, which is battery materials and we support all these other projects above them,” Campbell said, adding that diagnostic tools could boost the lower line. “So, if we take packages and diagnose it, and it’s really bad. This is a great advantage for us to recycle it immediately – I think it could be important.”
Campbell added that he did not believe that the diagnosis would be a majority business for Redwood, but that it fits into the company’s overall ethos.
“We have this constitutional frustration for the retirement of things before they need to retire,” he said. “So even if it’s not an important part of the business. It’s the right thing to do for this ecosystem.” And we would do it anyway. “