New recycling method, without crushing or melting, replenishes lithium in electrodes while keeping existing structure intact – and performance is nearly as good as new ones
From: Aalto University (in Finland)
April
22, 2021 -- The proliferation of electric cars, smartphones, and portable
devices is leading to an estimated 25 percent increase globally in the
manufacturing of rechargeable batteries each year. Many raw materials used in
the batteries, such as cobalt, may soon be in short supply. The European
Commission is preparing a new battery decree, which would require the recycling
of 95 percent of the cobalt in batteries. Yet existing battery recycling
methods are far from perfect.
Researchers
at Aalto University have now discovered that electrodes in lithium batteries
containing cobalt can be reused as is after being
newly saturated with lithium. In comparison to traditional recycling, which
typically extracts metals from crushed batteries by melting or dissolving them,
the new process saves valuable raw materials, and likely also energy.
‘In our earlier study of how lithium
cobalt oxide batteries age, we noticed that one of the main causes of battery
deterioration is the depletion of lithium in the electrode material. The structures
can nevertheless remain relatively stable, so we wanted to see if they can be
reused,’ explains Professor Tanja Kallio at Aalto University.
Almost like new
Rechargeable lithium-ion batteries have
two electrodes between which electrically charged particles move. Lithium
cobalt oxide is used in one electrode and, in most of the batteries, the other
is made of carbon and copper.
In traditional battery recycling
methods, some of batteries’ raw materials are lost and lithium cobalt oxide
turns into other cobalt compounds, which require a lengthy chemical refinement
process to turn them back into electrode material. The new method sidesteps
this painstaking process: by replenishing the spent lithium in the electrode
through an electrolysis process, commonly used in industry, the cobalt compound
can be directly reused.
The results show that the performance of
electrodes newly saturated with lithium is almost as good as that of those made
of new material. Kallio believes that with further development the method would
also work on an industrial scale.
‘By reusing the structures of batteries
we can avoid a lot of the labour that is common in recycling and potentially
save energy at the same time. We believe that the method could help companies
that are developing industrial recycling,’ Kallio says.
The researchers next aim to see if the
same method could also be used with the nickel-based batteries of electric
cars.
The research was published in
ChemSusChem journal.
https://www.aalto.fi/en/news/battery-parts-can-be-recycled-without-crushing-or-melting
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