Resource Recovery of Spent Lithium-Ion Battery Cathode Materials by a Supercritical Carbon Dioxide System
Journal article, 2024

The increasing global market size of high-energy storage devices due to the boom in electric vehicles and portable electronics has caused the battery industry to produce a lot of waste lithium-ion batteries. The liberation and de-agglomeration of cathode material are the necessary procedures to improve the recycling derived from spent lithium-ion batteries, as well as enabling the direct recycling pathway. In this study, the supercritical (SC) CO2 was innovatively adapted to enable the recycling of spent lithium-ion batteries (LIBs) based on facilitating the interaction with a binder and dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) co-solvent. The results show that the optimum experimental conditions to liberate the cathode particles are processing at a temperature of 70 °C and 80 bar pressure for a duration of 20 min. During the treatment, polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF) was dissolved in the SC fluid system and collected in the dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), as detected by the Fourier Transform Infrared Spectrometer (FTIR). The liberation yield of the cathode from the current collector reaches 96.7% under optimal conditions and thus, the cathode particles are dispersed into smaller fragments. Afterwards, PVDF can be precipitated and reused. In addition, there is no hydrogen fluoride (HF) gas emission due to binder decomposition in the suggested process. The proposed SC-CO2 and co-solvent system effectively separate the PVDF from Li-ion battery electrodes. Thus, this approach is promising as an alternative pre-treatment method due to its efficiency, relatively low energy consumption, and environmental benign features.

liberation

supercritical CO 2

cathode material

lithium-ion batteries

dimethyl sulfoxide

Author

Yuanpeng Fu

China University of Mining and Technology

Taiyuan University of Technology

Chalmers, Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Energy and Material

Xianshu Dong

Taiyuan University of Technology

Burcak Ebin

Chalmers, Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Energy and Material

Molecules

1420-3049 (ISSN) 14203049 (eISSN)

Vol. 29 7 1638

Implementering av superkritisk CO2-teknik för stegvis återvinning av elektrolyt, organiska ämnen och elektroder från förbrukade fordonsbatterier

Formas (2021-01699), 2022-01-01 -- 2025-12-31.

Development of innovative supercritical fluid technology for stepwise recycling of organics, electrolyte and electrodes from Li-ion battery waste

Swedish Energy Agency (50124-1), 2020-09-01 -- 2023-08-31.

Areas of Advance

Energy

Materials Science

Subject Categories

Chemical Process Engineering

Materials Chemistry

Other Chemical Engineering

DOI

10.3390/molecules29071638

More information

Latest update

10/10/2024