Recycling of Lithium-Ion Batteries—Current State of the Art, Circular Economy, and Next Generation Recycling
Review article, 2022

Being successfully introduced into the market only 30 years ago, lithium-ion batteries have become state-of-the-art power sources for portable electronic devices and the most promising candidate for energy storage in stationary or electric vehicle applications. This widespread use in a multitude of industrial and private applications leads to the need for recycling and reutilization of their constituent components. Improving the “recycling technology” of lithium ion batteries is a continuous effort and recycling is far from maturity today. The complexity of lithium ion batteries with varying active and inactive material chemistries interferes with the desire to establish one robust recycling procedure for all kinds of lithium ion batteries. Therefore, the current state of the art needs to be analyzed, improved, and adapted for the coming cell chemistries and components. This paper provides an overview of regulations and new battery directive demands. It covers current practices in material collection, sorting, transportation, handling, and recycling. Future generations of batteries will further increase the diversity of cell chemistry and components. Therefore, this paper presents predictions related to the challenges of future battery recycling with regard to battery materials and chemical composition, and discusses future approaches to battery recycling.

Materials handling

Recycling

Lithium-ion batteries

Electronic Waste

Author

Jonas Neumann

University of Münster

Martina Petranikova

Chalmers, Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Energy and Material

Marcel Meeus

EMIRI - The Energy Materials Industrial Research Initiative

Jorge D. Gamarra

Uppsala University

Reza Younesi

Uppsala University

Martin Winter

Forschungszentrum Jülich

University of Münster

Sascha Nowak

University of Münster

Advanced Energy Materials

1614-6832 (ISSN) 1614-6840 (eISSN)

Vol. 12 17 2102917

Driving Forces

Sustainable development

Areas of Advance

Energy

Materials Science

Subject Categories

Materials Chemistry

Other Chemical Engineering

Energy Systems

DOI

10.1002/aenm.202102917

More information

Latest update

3/7/2024 9