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Room‐temperature extraction of individual elements from charged spent LiFePO <sub>4</sub> batteries

55

Citations

26

References

2022

Year

Abstract

Abstract Recycling millions of metric tons of spent LiFePO 4 batteries would benefit human health while reducing resource depletion and environmental pollution. However, recovering individual elements from the spent batteries without generating waste is challenging. Here, we present a distinctive approach for recycling spent LiFePO 4 batteries at room temperature, where water is the only leaching agent consumed. FePO 4 and lithium intercalated graphite act as a precursor material for selectively extracting lithium, iron, and phosphorus through charging the LiFePO 4 batteries to the delithiated state. NaOH solution extracted Fe from FePO 4 within 30 min and regenerated without consumption, similar to a catalyst. Under the optimal leaching conditions (1 mol·L −1 NaOH, 0.5 h, NaOH/Fe molar ratio of 4.5), Fe and P leaching efficiencies achieved 89.1% and 99.2%, respectively. The methodology reflected in this research reduced the material cost per kg cathode material to a fraction of previously published reports, only occupies 6.13% of previous reports. In addition, the method improved the battery recycling revenue calculated by the EverBatt model by 2.31 times and 1.94 times over pyrometallurgical and hydrometallurgical methods. The proposed method allows for the convenient recovery of the elemental components of spent LiFePO 4 batteries.

References

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