Investigation of new recycling strategies for spent Li-ion batteries based on early Li recovery via selective leaching
Doktorsavhandling, 2025

In response to our society's environmental challenges, great efforts are being made worldwide to achieve climate neutrality: one of the actions is the electrification of transport, with significant help from rechargeable batteries mostly based on Li-ion chemistries. However, with this increasing demand for Li-ion batteries, many concerns have arisen regarding their life cycle, from raw materials supply to waste management. Recycling is necessary not only to dispose of the waste safely, but also to recover the critical metals such as Li, Co, Ni, Cu, and Mn. Hydrometallurgical techniques have been favoured in the last decades, as they enable the recovery of most elements (including Li) at a high rate and purity. This thesis investigates two new recycling strategies based on early Li recovery, which aim to increase the Li yield and allow the recovery of cathode metals together as precursors to directly re-synthesize the electrode material. The first strategy is based on the pyrolysis of the black mass, followed by water leaching. The second approach is based on using oxalic acid for the selective recovery of Li. In the first route, it was shown that during pyrolysis, the cathode material was reduced and transformed to more leachable forms: a mixture of Co, CoO, Ni, NiO, MnO, Mn2O3, and Li2CO3. Since Li2CO3 is sparingly soluble in water, water leaching was applied, and up to 70% of Li was recovered from the sample pyrolyzed at 600°C. Li recovery limitations could be connected to the formation of 3 distinct by-products of the pyrolysis: LiF, Li3PO4, and LiAlO2. The presence of Al and fluorine in the final leachate solution was considered to be unavoidable. However, the pyrolysis positively impacted the transition metal leachability, and they could be recovered with sulfuric acid without a reducing agent. The second strategy investigated the direct use of oxalic acid without any thermal pretreatment. The best operating conditions were determined as a temperature of 60°C, a solid to liquid ratio of 50 g/L, and an acid concentration of 0.6 M, corresponding to a molar ratio of 1:2.5 (cathode material metals: acid). This leads to more than 95% recovery of Li and 100% of Al. It was determined that the Li dissolution rate is chemically controlled, and the activation energy was estimated to be 76 kJ/mol. The leaching residue comprises a mix of graphite and a disordered (Co,Ni,Mn)C2O4 ·2H2O phase. This residue was then leached with sulfuric acid to dissolve the metal oxalates and separate them from the graphite. A one-stage leaching (2 M H2SO4, 65°C, 120 min, S/L = 20 g/L) results in more than 95% recovery of Ni, Co, and Mn and about 70% of Cu. Solvent extraction was used for Cu removal, and a 30 vol% Acorga M5640 in ESCAID was applied for 30 min at 25°C, with θ = 4 and 4 stages. The resulting recycled solution, free from Al, Li, and Cu, represents a promising feedstock for producing NMC 111 (LiNi1/3Mn1/3Co1/3O2).

Lithium

organic acid.

recycling

hydrometallurgy

thermal treatment

FB , Physics Origo, Kemigården 1, Take stairs A:4+B, floor 7 (Chalmers, Johanneberg campus)
Opponent: Denise Crocce Romano Espinosa, Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Sao Paulo (USP), SP, São Paulo, Brazil.

Författare

Léa Rouquette

Kärnkemi och industriell materialåtervinning

Kinetics study of the dissolution of black mass material using oxalic acid as a leaching agent

Journal of Hazardous Materials Advances,;Vol. 18(2025)

Artikel i vetenskaplig tidskrift

In response to our society's environmental challenges, great efforts are being made worldwide to achieve climate neutrality. One of the actions is the electrification of the transport sector, which was significantly enabled by rechargeable batteries, with lithium-ion batteries being the prevailing technology. With the increasing demand for these lithium-ion batteries, many concerns have arisen regarding their life cycle, from raw materials supply to end-of-life. Specifically, the battery waste management poses technological challenges as improper disposal can lead to the release of hazardous compounds (metal oxide, organic solvents, fluorinated compounds, …). Additionally, the waste can be seen as a secondary source for extracting critical metals such as Li, Co, Ni, Cu, or Mn. The circular economy concept dictates a paradigm shift toward the reusability of each waste component with minimal resource usage; hence, recycling is more than an option, it is a necessity.

Hydrometallurgical techniques have been favoured in the last decades, as they enable the recovery of most elements (including lithium) at a high rate and purity. Typically, the process starts with inorganic acid leaching to dissolve all metals, followed by a sequence of separation techniques (cementation, precipitation, or solvent extraction) to remove impurities and valuable transition metals from the solution, ending with lithium precipitation. This thesis investigated two new recycling strategies based on early lithium recovery, which aim to increase the lithium recovery rate and allow the recovery of cathode metals together as precursors to directly re-synthesize the electrode material. The first strategy is based on the pyrolysis of the black mass, followed by water leaching, while the second directly uses oxalic acid on the black mass for the selective recovery of lithium.  The results showed that both strategies are promising, as they present high recovery of the valuable elements and strong potential to produce the cathode material precursor (hydroxide or oxalate).

Ämneskategorier (SSIF 2025)

Materialkemi

Separationsprocesser

Oorganisk kemi

Miljöteknik och miljöledning

Kemiteknik

Drivkrafter

Hållbar utveckling

Styrkeområden

Energi

Infrastruktur

Chalmers materialanalyslaboratorium

ISBN

978-91-8103-234-5

Doktorsavhandlingar vid Chalmers tekniska högskola. Ny serie: 5692

Utgivare

Chalmers

FB , Physics Origo, Kemigården 1, Take stairs A:4+B, floor 7 (Chalmers, Johanneberg campus)

Online

Opponent: Denise Crocce Romano Espinosa, Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Sao Paulo (USP), SP, São Paulo, Brazil.

Mer information

Senast uppdaterat

2025-05-22