Electronic waste is moving up on regulatory agendas in 2026: New European waste-shipment rules, expanded recycling fees on products with non-removable batteries in California, and an e-waste import ban in Malaysia, for example, are all increasing pressure to recover more value before electronics are shredded or exported.
The world is projected to generate 82 million tonnes of e-waste annually by 2030, according to the United Nations’ most recent Global E-Waste Monitor report in 2024. The report estimated that current e-waste management captures less than a third of the recoverable metal value contained in discarded electronics.
For recyclers, much of that lost value is a consequence of what happens before a circuit board ever reaches a smelter or shredder. Boards contain a mixture of components such as memory chips, processors, magnets, and capacitors, as well as valuable raw materials such as copper, aluminum, tantalum, and precious metals. Conventional recycling often mixes everything into bulk streams and destroys components that might otherwise be reused.
Tuurny, a startup based in San Francisco, is developing an automated system to remove and separate reusable chips from circuit boards before the remaining material is shredded. In April, the company announced it had designed a robotic system, called Nantul, to identify and extract RAM integrated circuits, claiming each machine can recover 300 intact RAM ICs per hour.
Sina Ghashghaei, Tuurny’s founder, says the company is preparing its first field deployment with dozens of machines through a six-figure deal with Areera, a television recycler in the United Kingdom, which processes 1,500 tonnes of televisions per month. The deployment is planned for early 2027.
Tuurny’s first target is recovering RAM ICs and other chips used in legacy systems where replacement components can be difficult to source. Ghashghaei says the company is talking with a few legacy chip suppliers and pursuing potential agreements to supply aluminum and copper recovered from circuit boards to smelters and refiners. He declined to identify the companies involved.
Robots for Automated RAM Recovery
Traditional electronics recycling often begins by shredding boards and sorting the mixed output afterward. Tuurny aims to do the opposite: identify and remove components first, sort them by model or material, then reroute the recovered items to testing labs for potential reuse as new chips, or to refiners and smelters for further processing.
Nantul comprises three robotic systems in one: The first is an arm to continuously feed the component-removal robots, paired with two tabletop machines similar to 3D printers or computer numerical control (CNC) machines. A neural network identifies and catalogs components, then searches the internet for manufacturers’ thermal-profile specifications. Nantul uses those specifications to employ a combination of suction, controlled heat, computer vision, and robotic controls to remove chips while minimizing damage. Recovered items are then sorted by model number in material-specific groups.
“We’re creating a new supply chain from old feedstock that didn’t exist before,” Ghashghaei says, adding that manual recovery is expensive and difficult to scale.
Tuurny’s recovery system includes a computer vision system that identifies specific RAM components to assess them for recovery.Tuurny
Minghui Zheng, an associate professor of mechanical engineering at Texas A&M University who studies robotic disassembly and electronics recycling systems, says Tuurny’s approach appears technically feasible, especially when focused on the narrow, valuable target of recovering RAM from more controlled e-waste streams.
“RAM is a good starting point because it has relatively high reuse value and is more standardized than many other electronic parts,” Zheng says. The harder challenge, however, is removing chips “without heat, mechanical, or electrical damage, and making sure it still works reliably afterward.”
Used circuit boards can vary by layout, markings, age, contamination, solder condition, or prior damage. A robot has to identify the correct component, choose a removal strategy, apply heat locally, lift the part cleanly, and preserve enough information about the part for downstream testing and resale.
E-Waste Recycling Strategies
Ghashghaei says Tuurny is building small modular machines using off-the-shelf parts, custom controls, and Nvidia Jetson Nano hardware. The company is trying to keep costs down by reducing hardware complexity to arrive at a price point far below centralized industrial equipment used at large facilities. He says the biggest challenge from an engineering perspective has been developing the autonomous computer vision and robotic control.
Last year, the four-person startup received a NASA-funded grant to support an AI-powered repair assistant for printed circuit boards that used computer vision and a custom large language model to guide technicians.
Ghashghaei says Tuurny pivoted from board repair to e-waste processing after concluding that discarded electronics represented a larger market amid growing interest in the U.S. around on-shoring capacity for critical minerals and rare earths. The pivot also positions Tuurny to potentially address supply chain concerns around legacy chips for systems in telecom, aerospace, defense, and other industries where equipment remains in service long after chips leave mainstream production.
In practice, Zheng says the main challenge in making robotic electronics disassembly commercially viable is ensuring it’s adaptable enough to handle the large variability in e-waste while keeping costs reasonable.
“Every electronic product is different, and used boards may be damaged, dirty, or arranged differently. The robot must be able to find the right parts, remove them carefully, and avoid damaging them in real time, which creates major challenges for robotic perception, decision-making, planning, and manipulation,” Zheng says. “Economically, the recovered parts should be valuable enough to justify the costs of the robot, sensing, testing, maintenance, labor, and scaling up the process.”
For smelters and refiners, the question may be whether Tuurny can supply predictable material streams at commercial volumes. Ghashghaei acknowledged that Tuurny’s scaling efforts could run into its own supply chain constraints in trying to acquire enough components to build more robots.
Zheng called Tuurny’s approach promising but still early. “For now, it is more realistic as a targeted recovery strategy for valuable components like RAM,” Zheng says. “The key question is whether the robotic disassembly technology can work reliably, affordably, and at scale.”
The post “Robots Could Turn E-Waste Into a Source of Legacy Chips” by Shannon Cuthrell was published on 05/19/2026 by spectrum.ieee.org





















