Lithium-Ion Battery Recycling in the Circular Economy: A Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. General Trends in Number of Publications
3. Categorizations of the Articles and Analysis of the Literature
3.1. Analyzing Evaluation Study
3.2. Analyzing Experimental Studies
3.2.1. Pre-Treatment Process
Discharging Process
Separation
Dissolution
3.2.2. Hydrometallurgical Process
Acid Leaching or Reductive Leaching
3.2.3. Pyrometallurgical Process
3.2.4. Direct Physical Recycling Process
3.2.5. Co-Recycling Spent Lithium-Ion Batteries and Other Waste
3.3. Analyzing Conceptual Framework Studies
3.4. Analyzing Decision Making Studies
3.5. Analyzing Planning Studies
3.6. Analyzing Product/System Design Studies
3.7. Review Studies
3.8. Simulation Studies
3.9. Statistical and Mathematical Framework-Based Study
3.10. Survey and Interview
4. Discussion and Future Research
- Based on the in-depth literature review and discussion, some of the future research directions are given below: In the experimental studies, it was found that Li recovery varied from 65% to over 99%. As lithium carbonate, 100% of Li was recovered by precipitation using a closed-loop hydrometallurgical process. Slag cleaning in the pyrometallurgical process is critical as there is a high possibility of Li being lost in the slag content. In addition to material recovery, very few studies quantitatively assessed the economic potential of the recycling process (cost incurred per kg of material recovered) in their analysis, which should be widespread. Besides Li and Co recovery, the graphite recovery technique has received substantial attention. H2SO4 use in the hydrometallurgical process is still a dominant approach; however, organic green solvent use is gaining popularity. Froth flotation and organic waste use for material recovery are gaining significant attention. Many of the experimental studies claimed to have industrial-scale applications. Many of the processes moved towards a zero-waste approach, showing the motivation towards a circular economy with low process/less environmental impact.
- At present, within the articles analyzed, an EV market assessment is limited to the USA and Europe, and, in some cases, to BRICS countries. It should be expanded to other developed countries, such as Australia, which has the largest reserve of Li, is a significant player in Li production, and has aggressive demand for EVs in the coming years. However, a comprehensive global level assessment of the EV market should be performed. There is a scope for applying the LCA model for EOL scenarios based on the predicted automobile market globally and from regional perspectives (developing countries, material supply countries). Specific route selection for future EOL EV batteries requires further attention, as developing countries are not well equipped to explore various opportunities.
- Biological process and consumer behavior-related issues were less discussed topics associated with LIB recycling. Furthermore, most studies focused on EVs; a detailed assessment of the spent batteries derived from electronic waste (e-waste) and other portable equipment should be done.
- Less attention has been given to low-value non-metallic components such as solvents, plastics, lithium salts, and phosphorus, as shown by Sommerville, Zhu, Rajaeifar, Heidrich, Goodship and Kendrick [86]. There is a prospect of conducting a lifecycle cost assessment (LCC) of the recovered material from spent LIBs containing metallic and non-metallic components.
- The battery storage system is an emerging component that can be developed by reusing and remanufacturing the usable battery cells from EVs. However, there is a need for a comparative lifecycle assessment based on a battery energy storage system (BESS) developed from recycled material and a system constructed using virgin materials. There is a connection between solar PV and EV when it comes to BESS. Therefore, more research should be carried out to understand the opportunities around providing incentives for an integrated system (around 2nd-life applications of battery and solar PV systems together).
- From the literature analysis, it is evident that transportation (mobility) is the primary sector that would derive the spent LIBs from EVs. There is a supply associated with the REEs, such as Li (which is more severe than Ni), and recycling is found to be the most critical option related to material recovery. Techno-economic perspectives of various recycling processes should be performed to understand the eco-friendliness and economic benefits at the industrial scale. However, before the recycling process, reuse is the most viable option for better financial gain and environmental impact. The direct recycling process is a complementary process for material reuse and remanufacturing, and that also connects to the 2nd-life applications of spent LIBs materials (both cathode and anode materials). More research should be performed in this area to assess financial viability.
- Gaps in Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) in spent battery reverse logistics and recycling should further be assessed. Appropriate policy around LIBs from EV with low-value materials should be in place, and case-specific guidance to recyclers should be provided. To gain eco-efficiency, cascaded use, regulations, and economic incentives would be essential [96]. There is a need to further assess the level of subsidies and assistance packages required for EV manufacturers to develop recycling processes, as the lack of cost-effective technologies is still a significant barrier. Newmarket development and incentives for new businesses dealing with recycled materials were underprivileged. The impact of the regulation of battery 2nd-life applications also requires further attention. Financial support to develop test bench development as part of the R&D that is assessing remaining battery life should also be widespread. Policymakers should focus on incentivizing high initial costs for the LIB system. Regulation targeting 2nd-life battery use and EOL management should consider economic incentives and environmental efficiency. The regulatory intervention of applying various business models, such as product as service or sharing models, for effective EOL-based management engaging stakeholders should further be explored. With the EPR, the scope for the comparative analysis of various collection schemes should be explored.
- New business model development remains a challenge to a stable material supply that encourages domestic recycling. Stakeholder perceptions and motivations for implementing circular business model strategies, such as regeneration, reuse, and recycling, should be understood by empirical research from diverse country contexts, as EV penetration is uneven across the globe (developed vs. developing countries). There is a clear separation between circular strategies for EV LIBs—reuse and remanufacturing (2nd-life applications) and recycling (for material recovery, for example, cost-intensive recovery of Li, which is now limited to 50–60% at the industrial scale). There would be a shift from battery sales to service provision (under the product as service—circular business model). Command and control, market incentives, and regulatory design were central to developing an innovative business model.
- Reverse logistics is one of the critical issues associated with fire safety and the efficient recovery of materials. Flash cryogenic freezing as a method described by Grandjean, Groenewald, McGordon and Marco [74], among other processes, could be one of the solutions that support further research and initiatives in this area.
- Relative statistical entropy (RSE) and MFA were applied by Velazquez-Martinez, Porvali, van den Boogaart, Santasalo-Aarnio, Lundstrom, Reuter and Serna-Guerrero [88] for an optimized material recovery process. Alternative methods such as exergy and thermos–economic analysis could also be used as per the authors to understand the Al and Cu recycling process. The authors applied the RSE method and MFA for the individual hydrometallurgical and pyrometallurgical processes. A similar analysis could be used for the cathode material (that contains Li and Co) recovery process or the direct recycling process. RSE and MFA-based complex simulation methods were also proposed by Martinez, Van den Boogaart, Lundstrom, Santasalo-Aarnio, Reuter and Serna-Guerrero [65]. Simulation types of studies could further be extended to applying LCA in a step-by-step process for understanding the potential environmental impacts of various recycling processes or sub-processes, such as the sieving system.
- Due to the complexity of the present EV battery design and the requirement for future large-scale battery pack disassembly, robot-assisted automatic disassembly will be the next frontier in this case. A bar code application and RFID tag-based material identification technique could be applied at the beginning of the product design so that the disassembly process could be more efficient and effective. The application of blockchain technology was found for various other waste streams such as fashion, textile, and e-waste, which can also be applied to EV LIBs as this waste stream is more material-intensive (containing high-value materials). Electrochemical impedance spectrometry was seen as one of the large-scale disassembly techniques.
- Material substitution (anode material in LIBs) is also a critical area with ample opportunities, especially when using expired or wasted materials. For example, Dai, Hou, Liu, Yao, Yu and Li [77] used expired aminophylline for LIB anode material. There will be new research directions, i.e., finding alternative materials to be used in LIB production. However, from the circular economy context, such further material use must consider the EOL solutions simultaneously so that downstream recycling could be performed economically and in an environmentally-friendly manner (application of LCA would be an essential part of the assessment). With the current demand for Ni, mining output would meet only 34% of the global market. Alternatives should be found simultaneously, and recovery techniques should be experimented with. In addition to recent geopolitical issues, such as the war in Ukraine, which suddenly forced the price of Ni to be significantly higher, again indicates the market volatility around metal prices and required increased attention to cathode material recycling—as well as finding alternative materials and product designs for batteries. From February 2022 to April 2022, the price of Ni increased from $24,361 to $33,223 per tonne, which was a sudden shock for EV manufacturing industries [114].
- LIB repurposing as part of the CBM development is an open research opportunity integrating several assessment methods such as LCA and energy flow modeling, as observed from the literature. The combination of MFA and LCA should be explored to understand the economic viability of high-value material recovery. Coordination between EV manufacturers and energy storage system suppliers should be explored for energy system development from repurposed EV batteries. The environmental and economic impacts of the regeneration of the battery manufacturing system (using recycled material) should be assessed compared to new raw material usage (virgin material from mining) by using cradle-to-cradle LCA models. Remanufacturing and 2nd-life applications of LIBs should be further assessed using various indicators of CBM elements—such as value proposition, value creation, and value capture. Stakeholders’ intention and their concerns should clearly be articulated through in-depth research.
- The hydrometallurgical process will dominate in terms of the amount of material recovery and process cost. The battery cell design is critical for high yield in the downstream recycling process. Further assessment of the system-level development for a range of EV batteries (configuration and chemistries) should be identified. Product design should be performed so that cathode materials can be easily recycled and repurposed. Tan, Wang, Chen, Li, Sun, Liu, Yang, Xiang, Sun and Duan [82] have given some examples for future research, such as understanding failure mechanisms, cathode material with a single structure, material design, and material upgrading. A combined hydro- and pyrometallurgical recycling process scheme could be modeled by understanding the overall environmental impact of the integrated process. The integration would be necessary to minimize the material loss that is generally the case for the pyrometallurgical process (materials such as REEEs, Li, and Mn are lost in slag) when the mixed battery (NiMH plus LIBs) is recycled.
- The recycling process should be given more attention from the point of view of material supply risk. Furthermore, when material recovery is considered from recycling, an environmental impact assessment of virgin material should be performed to realize the net benefits of a recycling plant’s high investment and operational cost (i.e., cost of electricity).
- Despite intensive research on the LIB recycling process, the characteristics of other alternatives, such as the reuse and remanufacturing of batteries, are generally unknown when assessing the remaining life. The optimization of single methods and lifecycle stages should be given further attention. The remaining lifetime assessment of used batteries and durability should be based on more scientific data (battery characterization). Such an assessment method should support the decision-making process in selecting the routes for 2nd-life applications of batteries.
- Second-life application delays close-loop recycling. However, this application should not be expected by the recyclers. In this scenario, EOL management (including the 2nd-life application) should involve recyclers so that after the remaining 2nd life, they receive a stable supply of waste material. That means that stakeholders associated with 2nd-life applications (such as energy storage systems) would work closely with recyclers by exchanging data and information. Collaboration in the battery value chain is essential, as Olsson, Fallahi, Schnurr, Diener and van Loon [15] identified for new business opportunities and models.
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Reference | Year of Publication | Country of Publication | Focus of the Study | Major Findings |
---|---|---|---|---|
Pagliaro and Meneguzzo [21] | 2019 | Italy | Reuse and recycling perspective of circular economy | 1. Product design and green chemistry for green recovery are critical to the streamlined and automated recycling process. 2. Electric vehicles, renewable energy systems, and battery storage systems will be essential. |
Velázquez-Martínez, et al. [22] | 2019 | Finland | LIBs recycling processes | 1. Pyrometallurgical recycling process is robust; however, only metallic elements can be recovered through the process. 2. In remanufacturing, focused- LIBs material recovery activities, mechanical processing, and hydro- and pyrometallurgical processes are required. |
Thompson, et al. [23] | 2020 | UK | Design | 1. Recycling processes in the future will depend on battery cell design. 2. Besides green material recovery techniques, the techno-economic analysis should be performed to understand the well-suited recycling process. |
Roy, et al. [24] | 2021 | Singapore | LIBs from e-waste recycling method | 1. For closed-loop recycling of spent LIBs, bioleaching, waste for waste approach, and electrodeposition were identified as crucial methods. |
Kautz, et al. [25] | 2021 | Germany | Potentials and barriers of circular economy in case of waste LIBs | 1. Recycling, reuse, and repurposing should not be the only paths but rather implementing innovative business models such as product as a service or sharing model. However, stakeholders are in doubt about implementing such business models. |
Neumann, et al. [20] | 2022 | Germany | Challenges associated to chemical composition, recycling process and approaches to battery recycling | 1. Companies will be more inclined toward a direct recycling method that depends on stabilizing battery chemistries and enhanced electrolyte recovery capability. 2. For solid-state batteries, mechanical handling and hydrometallurgy processes would be more challenging to implement. |
Doose, et al. [26] | 2021 | Germany | Material close-looping and challenges associated to battery recycling | 1. Establishment of proper separation technique and method should be applied before recycling. Such arrangements could be transnational. 2. For low-cost batteries, recycling is not an attractive economic option. |
Werner, et al. [27] | 2020 | Germany | Recycling supply chain | 1. Revenue generation after selling secondary raw materials recovered from spent batteries (including an efficient collection scheme) is a decisive choice for recycling. 2. In the long-run future recycling capability should be expanded globally to use the recoverable material in battery manufacturing. However, present demand will mainly rely on virgin material production. |
Piątek, et al. [28] | 2021 | Sweden | Chemistries and recycling methods of LIBs | 1. For a genuinely green battery technology, from the policymakers’ perspectives, sustainable recycling concepts should be supported by EV manufacturers. |
Makuza, et al. [29] | 2021 | China | Pyrometallurgical recycling process | 1. Regulatory frameworks and government incentives are the main drivers for innovation. |
[30] | 2022 | Romania | Recycling processes | 1. Hydrometallurgical process is less intensive for the environment, and many of the current studies focus on these recycling methods. |
Mossali, et al. [31] | 2020 | Italy | Opportunities and challenges in recycling processes of LIBs | 1. Pyrometallurgical process is mainly used at an industrial scale; however, slag formation and intense energy use often restrict environmentally sound and economically efficient lithium recovery, calling for greener and more efficient solutions. 2. Hydrometallurgical recycling is essentially cathode chemistry dependent and complex and leads to an uneconomically viable industrial-scale application option. 3. There is a strong fragmentation of the current recycling processes, which should be integrated to overcome the economic and environmental criticalities for the high material yield in the recycling process. |
Fujita, et al. [32] | 2021 | China | Disposition alternatives of spent LIBs in automotive | 1. Cost of electricity is one of the significant barriers to a low recycling process. Places, where the price is cheaper should be given priority to establishing recycling plants. 2. Reuse and recycling technologies must address the cost and environmental pollution with social systems and regulations. |
Yang, et al. [33] | 2021 | China | Sustainability of LIBs industry | 1. Governments, manufacturers, recyclers, and end-users have a district role in the battery value chain. 2. Industries should pursue the CE approach and sustainability-inspired technologies towards achieving sustainability. |
Yanamandra, et al. [34] | 2022 | USA | Recycling of lead-acid batteries | 1. Regulatory support, economic recovery methods, and spent battery separation at source are the main success factors for lead-acid battery recycling systems in USA and Europe. |
Kotak, et al. [35] | 2021 | Germany | End of life (EOL) vehicle batteries | 1. Reuse is the economic step before recycling as it provides some time for recycling companies to develop energy and cost-efficiency methods. |
Sommerville, et al. [36] | 2020 | UK | physical processes for safe spent LIBs recycling | 1. Current commercial processes should be altered for 100% recyclability of spent LIBs. 2. Opportunities lie in the separation of black mass post cell disassembly or comminution, which tends to optimize the process of short or direct loop recycling. |
Duarte Castro, et al. [37] | 2022 | Italy | Spent LIBs valorization | 1. Literature related to LiCoO2 cathodes was widely discussed, while most of the innovative recycling technologies using spent automotive batteries were limited to lab-based studies. 2. Economic aspects and environmental impacts of the technologies require further assessment. |
Slattery, et al. [38] | 2021 | USA | EOL LIBs in Transportation sector | 1. Regulation, the economic advantage of bulk shipping, and warehouse facilities will be the critical components of the spent LIBs ecosystem from the perspective of safe battery transportation. 2. Reverse supply chain mechanism and responsible stakeholders involved in the EOL LIB ecosystem should be identified to develop the collection and recycling system policy. |
D’Adamo and Rosa [39] | 2019 | Italy | EOL EV management | 1. Further research is required on the economics of EV recycling systems, the role of power electronics, the applicability of circular economy, and recycling activities around CE models. 2. Waste management and the renewable energy sector can contribute to the further development of the EOL EV management sector. |
Salim, et al. [40] | 2019 | Australia | solar photovoltaic and battery energy storage systems | 1. Lack of socio-economic research is a barrier to effective policy implementation 2. Systems modeling approach could be an important research scheme to identify stakeholders and complex dynamics in the battery energy storage value chain. |
Grey and Tarascon [41] | 2017 | UK | Battery monitoring system | 1. New analytical methods for battery chemistries optimization should be performed along with interdisciplinary research. 2. Potential areas of investigation are battery health record monitoring system, use of optical fibers for monitoring and assessment related readouts, and integration of switch-on repair mechanisms in the original battery design. |
Fichtner, et al. [42] | 2022 | Germany | Future perspectives of Rechargeable Batteries | 1. There is scope for improvement in the battery chemistries and cells. 2. Battery storage devices should be made based on sustainable material and more energy and performance, which requires more R&D in the battery sector. |
Sethurajan and Gaydardzhiev [43] | 2021 | Belgium | Bioprocessing of spent LIBs for metal recovery | 1. Bioelectrochemical systems have remarkable potential for metal recovery from LIBs. 2. The early stage is that metal recovery from LIBs using a biotechnological process. 3. Bioleaching parameters should be optimized, and pregnant leach solution as part of the biological metal recovery techniques should have further research. |
Journal Outlet | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 | 2020 | 2021 | 2022 | Grand Total |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
ACS Sustainable Chemistry & Engineering | 1 | 1 | 3 | 5 | |||
Advanced Sustainable Systems | 1 | 1 | |||||
Applied Sciences-Basel | 1 | 1 | |||||
Batteries-Basel | 1 | 1 | 2 | ||||
Chemical Engineering Journal | 1 | 1 | |||||
Chemie Ingenieur Technik | 2 | 2 | |||||
Chemsuschem | 1 | 1 | 2 | ||||
Energies | 1 | 1 | 2 | ||||
Energy | 1 | 1 | |||||
Energy Policy | 1 | 1 | |||||
Energy Storage Materials | 1 | 1 | |||||
Environmental Science & Technology | 1 | 1 | 2 | ||||
Frontiers In Energy Research | 1 | 1 | |||||
Frontiers In Materials | 1 | 1 | |||||
Hydrometallurgy | 1 | 1 | |||||
Journal Of Cleaner Production | 1 | 1 | 2 | ||||
Journal Of Energy Storage | 2 | 1 | 3 | ||||
Journal Of Environmental Chemical Engineering | 1 | 1 | 2 | ||||
Journal Of Environmental Management | 1 | 1 | |||||
Journal Of Industrial Ecology | 1 | 1 | |||||
Journal Of Physics-Materials | 1 | 1 | |||||
Journal Of Property Planning and Environmental Law | 1 | 1 | |||||
Journal of the Electrochemical Society | 1 | 1 | |||||
Materials | 1 | 1 | |||||
Metals | 3 | 2 | 5 | ||||
Minerals | 1 | 1 | |||||
Nature Sustainability | 1 | 1 | |||||
Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers Part I-Journal of Systems And Control Engineering | 1 | 1 | |||||
Resources Conservation and Recycling | 1 | 10 | 11 | ||||
Separation And Purification Technology | 1 | 1 | |||||
Surface Innovations | 1 | 1 | 2 | ||||
Sustainability | 2 | 2 | |||||
University Politehnica of Bucharest Scientific Bulletin Series B-Chemistry and Materials Science | 1 | 1 | |||||
Waste Management | 1 | 1 | 1 | 3 | |||
Waste Management & Research | 1 | 1 | |||||
Grand Total | 1 | 3 | 9 | 14 | 36 | 3 | 66 |
Major Subject/Research Field | References |
---|---|
Business model | Albertsen, Richter, Peck, Dalhammar and Plepys [14], Olsson, Fallahi, Schnurr, Diener and van Loon [15], Wralsen, Prieto-Sandoval, Mejia-Villa, O’Born, Hellstrom and Faessler [7], Schulz-Monninghoff, et al. [44] |
Disassembly | Marshall, et al. [45], Gloser-Chahoud, et al. [46] |
Policy and regulation | Giosue, et al. [47] |
Recovery only | Kumar, et al. [48], Baars, et al. [49], Chan, et al. [50,51], Schwich, et al. [52,53], Diaz, et al. [54], Takahashi, et al. [55], Rey, et al. [56], Peng, et al. [57], Cerrillo-Gonzalez, et al. [58], Ruismaki, et al. [59], Kaiser, et al. [60], Pavon, et al. [61,62], Peng, et al. [63], Liivand, et al. [64], Martinez, et al. [65], Bai, et al. [66], Liu, et al. [67], Karabelli, et al. [68], Chernyaev, et al. [69], Grandjean, et al. [70], Rastegarpanah, et al. [71], Hou, et al. [72], Danczak, et al. [73], Grandjean, et al. [74], Torabian, Jafari and Bazargan [9] |
Recovery and recycling | Dunn, et al. [75] |
Recycling only | Paper focus—Anode material: Hou, et al. [76] (Expired-oxytetracycline), Dai, et al. [77] (expired aminophylline), Paper focus—Cathode material: dos Santos, et al. [78] (Co, Ni, Mn, Li), Roldan-Ruiz, et al. [79] (Li and Co), Vieceli, et al. [80] (Li, Mn, Ni and Co), Rambau, et al. [81] (Mn), Tan, Wang, Chen, Li, Sun, Liu, Yang, Xiang, Sun and Duan [82] (Ni, Co, Mn), Charles, et al. [83] (Co, Li and graphite), Piatek, et al. [84] (Co, Ni), Both cathode and anode material: Sommerfeld, et al. [85] (lithium and mixed cobalt, nickel, and copper alloy), Sommerville, et al. [86] (commercial recycling technologies in general), Sadhukhan and Christensen [87] (LCA including recycling process of battery energy storage system), Velazquez-Martinez, et al. [88] (Al, Cu, Li, Ni), Rinne, et al. [89] (Cu, Al, Ni, Co, Li, Mn), Pavon, et al. [90] (Co, Cu, FE, Ni and Mn), Thompson, et al. [91] (Co, Mn, Fe, Li, Al, Ni), Hsieh, et al. [92] (Co, Ni, Li), Chabhadiya, et al. [93] (Cu, Li, Ni, Mn, Li) |
Recycling and reuse | Natarajan, et al. [94] |
Reuse only | Wewer, et al. [95], Richa, et al. [96], Ciobotaru, et al. [97], Gucciardi, et al. [98] |
Waste management | Ahuja, et al. [99], Lagae-Capelle, et al. [100], Castro, et al. [101] |
Reference | Country of Publication | Name of the Process | Experimental Recoverable Lithium Yield from the Process | Yield of Other Metals | Further Comment on the Process |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sommerfeld, Vonderstein, Dertmann, Klimko, Orac, Miskufova, Havlik and Friedrich [85] | Germany | Pyrometallurgical approach—Smelting operation using suitable slag design in laboratory electric arc furnace | 82.4% | In the metal alloy, Cobalt—81.6% Nickel—93.3% Copper—90.7% | Higher quartz addition increased the lithium yield but deceased lithium content in the slag |
Zhu, Xiao, Mao, Zhang, You, Tang and Zhong [106] | China | low-temperature fluorination roasting and water leaching | 99.23% | Removal rates from the waste carbon residue (WCR), Cobalt—99.59% Nickel—99.54% Manganese—99.82% Aluminum—96.38% silicon—98.41% Iron—97.28% Sulfur—98.61% | The WCR purification process is economically cost effective around $3.654/kg. Recycled ammonium fluoride is like virgin material. |
dos Santos, Garde, Ronchini, Cardozo, de Souza, Abbade, Regone, Jegatheesan and de Oliveira [78] | Brazil | Hydrometallurgy-based technology—The RecycLib technology, considered as upstream recycling technology | 98% as lithium cobalt oxide LiCoO2 (LCO) | lithium nickel manganese cobalt oxide (NMC)—85% | Inexpensive reagent use, low environmental impact, low operating cost, high work safety with potential for industrial scalability |
Chan, Anawati, Malik and Azimi [50] | Canada | Hydrometallurgical process—Closed-Loop Recycling, recycled cathode material | ∼100% (lithium is precipitated as lithium carbonate) | Cobalt, Nickel, and Manganese ~100% | This process is considered as high-recovery recycling process which will be applicable to fast-growing LIB industry. There is a scope for integrating the processing steps. |
Lagae-Capelle, Cognet, Madhavi, Carboni and Meyer [100] | France | Formation of high-quality Al-MOF-type porous material from PET plastics and Li-ion battery waste | - | 2.5 g of Al MOF at 70 and 90 °C from 5 g of crushed batteries (containing 240 mg of Al) and 3 g of plastic bottles (containing 1.8 g of the organic ligand) | MIL-53 the output material has similar properties of pure chemical compounds. Use of greener solvent (instead of Dimethylformamide) and energy use would optimize the process. |
Lu, Stevens and Mumford [51] | Australia | solvent extraction technology using organo-phosphinic acid | - | - | The process can prevent contamination of different solvent. With the process, lithium can be extracted at high pH range (5.5–8.0). |
Hou, Dai, Liu, Yaol, Yu and Li [76] | China | Two-step carbonization process for anode material production of LIBs | - | - | Low recycling cost and high recovery rate was achieved in direct process, while indirect process route has broader application scope. |
Torabian, Jafari and Bazargan [9] | Iran | Electrochemical discharge using salt solutions for avoidance of handling hazards | - | - | Ultrasonication had an impact of discharge performance. |
Schwich, Schubert and Friedrich [52] | Germany | Early-stage lithium recovery (“ESLR”) using Supercritical CO2-Carbonation | 79% | - | “ESLR” method has advantages over ordinary H2O-leaching and that the indirect carbonation mechanism is favourable. |
Diaz, Strauss, Adhikari, Klaehn, McNally and Lister [54] | USA | Electrochemical leaching | >96% | Co, Ni, and Mn—>96% (leaching efficiencies) | electrowon Cu and graphitic carbon can be obtained as by product in the metal leaching process |
Takahashi, Botelho, Espinosa and Tenorio [55] | Brazil | Solvent extraction and leaching-based Co extraction | - | Co—91% (leaching—solvent Extraction) | The knife mill was the only one who was able to ground the batteries. |
Rey, Vallejo, Santiago, Iturrondobeitia and Lizundia [56] | Spain | LCA of Graphite Recycling | - | - | In any event, it demonstrates that several of the examined techniques are environmentally competitive with raw graphite while also avoiding waste management difficulties associated with uncontrolled battery disposal. These findings highlight the value of recycling and upcycling as methods for obtaining materials with lesser environmental effect. |
Peng, Liu, Aji, Wilson and Lundstrom [57] | Finland | Hydrometallurgy—acid Dissolution | extraction efficiencies—99% | Co—99% | This unique technique not only improves LIBs waste leaching efficiency, but it also improves total Co and Li recovery from LIBs waste, even from the bigger particle size fractions that are generally lost in circulation. |
Roldan-Ruiz, Ferrer, Gutierrez and del Monte [79] | Spain | p-Toluenesulfonic Acid-Based Cathode Recycling | - | Co—94% | Without the reducing agent, p-toluene sulfonic acid monohydrate (PTSA) and choline chloride (ChCl) (PTSAChCl)-based deep eutectic Solvents (DESs) showed excellent Li and Co solvent capabilities at low temperatures, short times, and low amounts of solvent |
Cerrillo-Gonzalez, Villen-Guzman, Acedo-Bueno, Rodriguez-Maroto and Paz-Garcia [58] | Spain | Hydrometallurgical Extraction | 65–70% (extraction efficiency) | - | The proposed model can be extended to other cathodes’ chemistry and extracting agents along with the experimental observation of using a reducing agent and temperature during the leaching process |
Vieceli, Casasola, Lombardo, Ebin and Petranikova [80] | Sweden | Hydrometallurgical recycling using sulfuric acid | 70% (leaching efficiency) | Mn, Ni and Co—70% (leaching efficiency) | lower temperatures of incineration (400–500 °C) and at higher leaching times are associated to partial carbothermic reduction of the metals. |
Ruismaki, Rinne, Danczak, Taskinen, Serna-Guerrero and Jokilaakso [59] | Finland | Flotation and Pyrometallurgy-based graphite recovery | - | Co—81.3% | Further refinement by pyrometallurgical or hydrometallurgical procedures is required to isolate the precious metals, such as Co, Ni, and Cu. |
Rambau, Musyoka, Palaniyandy and Manyala [81] | South Africa | Manganese-Based Metal Organic Framework | - | 99% coulombic efficiency (discharge specific capacity) | The developed LIBs recycling strategy has the potential to complement existing LIBs recycling techniques while also contributing to the circular economy. |
Ciobotaru, Benga and Valreanu [97] | Bucharest | Reconditioning | - | - | 85% of the batch of batteries were prone to undergo reconditioning process. |
Pavon, Kaiser and Bertau [61] | Germany | COOL-process (counter-current solvent extraction) | Li-free black mass | Al (1.2 ± 0.02 mg L−1; 99.7 ± 1.07%), Co (3.7 ± 0.12 mg L−1; 99.8 ± 0.78%), Cu (3.1 ± 0.48 mg L−1; 97.8 ± 1.46%), Fe (0.8 ± 0.21 mg L−1; 98.5 ± 0.65%), Mn (38.3 ± 0.91 mg L−1; 99.9 ± 1.11%), and Ni (14.4 ± 2.1 mg L−1; 98.6 ± 1.32%) | This is a holistic recycling process for LIB that can recover housing material, lithium and the accompanying metals |
Kaiser, Pavon and Bertau [60] | Germany | COOL process | - | Leaching efficiency using 2N H2SO4 and 4N HCl acid, Co—63.2–63.8%, Cu—63.8–80.1% Mn—66.4–79.9% Ni—50.4–63.3% | Elevating reaction temperature as well as extending reaction time would enhance the leaching efficiency |
Wu, Soh, Chan, Meng, Meyer, Srinivasan and Tay [62] | Singapore | Hydrometallurgical Processes—Leaching with green Reductant (orange peel powder (OP) | around 90% (recovery efficacy in LIB black mass-containing leaching liquor) | CO—>73% (recovery efficiency) Mn and Ni- around 90% (recovery efficacy in LIB black mass-containing leaching liquor) | The utilization of fruit peel trash to recover valuable metals from wasted LIBs is a cost-effective, environmentally benign, and long-term method for reducing both waste kinds’ of environmental impact. |
Peng, Hamuyuni, Wilson and Lundstrom [63] | Finland | Reductive leaching of cobalt and lithium in sulfuric acid system | 95.7% | Co—93.8%, Cu—0.7%, | Selective leaching of Co and Li vs. Cu was proposed and achieved in a sulfuric acid system at 80 °C with a leaching time of 90 min with C6H8O6 introduced at the start of the leaching process. |
Liivand, Kazemi, Walke, Mikli, Uibu, Macdonald and Kruusenberg [64] | Estonia | Graphite recovery (for valuable catalyst material for Electrochemical Oxygen Reduction) | - | - | In comparison to commercial nitrogen-doped graphene, NG-Bat made from SLIB demonstrated improved physical and electrochemical properties. |
Bai, Muralidharan, Li, Essehli and Belharouak [66] | Ethylene glycol-based solvent recovery system for direct recycling | - | - | This cost-effective and ecologically beneficial separation technique not only delivers a closed-loop recycling solution, but also propels battery recycling into a new paradigm. | |
Gucciardi, Galceran, Bustinza, Bekaert and Casas-Cabanas [98] | Spain | Recovering of used FePO4 electrodes from calendar aged Lithium-ion (Li-ion) batteries and use it in Sodium-ion (Na-ion) cells | - | - | Cost of LFP recycling will be low with the proposed material alternative while also lowering environmental effect and encouraging sustainability. |
Liu, Peng, Porvali, Wang, Wilson and Lundstrom [67] | China | simultaneous recycling of LIBs and nickel−metal hydride batteries (NiMHs) | >93% | Co—98% Ni—98% | In this method no oxidant or reductant additions required, and it is environment-friendly and economic |
Pavon, Kaiser, Mende and Bertau [90] | Germany | COOL-Process | 99.05 ± 0.64 wt.% | Co, Cu, Fe, Ni, and Mn—(97.7 wt.%) in solid residue | This is a zero waste-approach for recovering Li from primary and secondary sources |
Chernyaev, Partinen, Klemettinen, Wilson, Jokilaakso and Lundstrom [69] | Finland | Leaching of pre-treated LiCoO2-rich battery waste (use of Cu and Al current collector as reductants) | - | Co leaching—47% Cu (66%) | According to the authors, 11 g of copper (0.75 Cu/Co, mol/mol), 4.8 g of aluminum (0.7 Al/Co, mol/mol) or a combination of both were the optimum required recipe for full cobalt extraction. |
Grandjean, Groenewald and Marco [70] | UK | Flash cryogenic freezing for battery reverse logistics | - | - | With the experiment, the potential reuse and remanufacture of individual LIB cells from a complete damaged pack is made easier, extending the useful life, lowering raw material consumption, and boosting the environmental sustainability of EV adoption. |
Piatek, Budnyak, Monti, Barcaro, Gueret, Grape, Jaworski, Inge, Rodrigues and Slabon [84] | Sweden | Green Metal−Organic Framework for CO-Ni selective seperation | - | 30% of Ni2+ recovery | By substituting some of the coordinated water molecules in the MOF tubes, the Ni2+ ions were more likely to enter. |
Chabhadiya, Srivastava and Pathak [93] | India | Two-step leaching process (LiNixCoyMnzO2 type exhausted cathode material) | ≥99% (in selective dissolution) | Cu—≥ 99% (in selective dissolution) | Biodegradable H2C2O4 and low emission H2SO4 are not only suitable for environment-friendly valorization of waste but also cost-effective for downstream processing |
Hou, Yu, Liu, Yao, Liao, Dai and Li [72] | China | Waste bio-based material use in anode for LIBs using carbonization process | - | - | High specific surface area (492 m2/g) and structural defects induced by carbonization process enhanced the electrochemical performance |
Danczak, Ruismaki, Rinne, Klemettinen, O’Brien, Taskinen, Jokilaakso and Serna-Guerrero [73] | Finland | Integrated froth flotation and nickel-slag cleaning process | - | - | Industrial-scale process of the method should be performed |
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Islam, M.T.; Iyer-Raniga, U. Lithium-Ion Battery Recycling in the Circular Economy: A Review. Recycling 2022, 7, 33. https://doi.org/10.3390/recycling7030033
Islam MT, Iyer-Raniga U. Lithium-Ion Battery Recycling in the Circular Economy: A Review. Recycling. 2022; 7(3):33. https://doi.org/10.3390/recycling7030033
Chicago/Turabian StyleIslam, Md Tasbirul, and Usha Iyer-Raniga. 2022. "Lithium-Ion Battery Recycling in the Circular Economy: A Review" Recycling 7, no. 3: 33. https://doi.org/10.3390/recycling7030033