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17 сакавіка 2026, 09:33
Green method to recycle spent batteries' lithium
Photo: Inside Climate News / iStock
BEIJING, 17 March (BelTA - China Daily) - The rise of lithium-ion
batteries in electric vehicles and energy storage systems has led to a
growing number of retired batteries, posing a significant challenge for
sustainable energy development. Chinese scientists have introduced a
green recycling strategy that extracts lithium with more than 95 percent
efficiency under mild conditions.
The study, recently published
in the journal Nature Communications, reveals an innovative "fizzy"
method using only carbon dioxide and water. The approach not only
recovers lithium but also transforms other metals into high-value
catalysts while capturing carbon dioxide.
"Lithium-ion batteries
typically degrade after five to eight years, making recycling essential
for conserving strategic metals like lithium, cobalt and nickel, while
preventing pollution and managing safety risks," said Sun Zhi, a
professor at the Institute of Process Engineering at the Chinese Academy
of Sciences and the study's corresponding author.
Sun noted that
traditional recycling methods often consume large amounts of energy and
chemicals, generate pollution, involve complex procedures and yield
low-value products. These include pyrometallurgical processes, which
require prolonged melting at temperatures exceeding 1,000 C, and
hydrometallurgical processes, which involve multiple chemical steps that
often produce wastewater and hazardous waste.
To address these
issues, the research team developed a method using carbon dioxide as the
sole reagent. They grind the cathode material from spent batteries to
disrupt its crystalline structure, causing lithium atoms to migrate to
the particle surface and form a lithium-rich layer, while other metals,
such as nickel and cobalt, remain in the crystal structure. This
separation enhances lithium extraction efficiency.
Scientists
then soak the material in water and introduce carbon dioxide, a process
similar to producing carbonated beverages. Trace hydrogen ions from
dissolved carbon dioxide react with the lithium, dissolving it into a
lithium bicarbonate solution while leaving other metals unaffected.
By
heating the lithium bicarbonate solution, scientists obtain lithium
carbonate - a key material for lithium batteries - with a purity
exceeding 99.5 weight percent. The solid residue left after lithium
extraction is not waste. It has a unique structure that makes it a
high-performance catalyst, maintaining stability for more than 200 hours
of operation.
"This process, which operates at low chemical
consumption, offers an innovative green solution for recycling spent
lithium-ion batteries," Sun said, emphasizing its potential to support
China's dual carbon goals of peaking carbon emissions before 2030 and
achieving carbon neutrality before 2060.
"In the future, we plan
to explore the direct use of industrial flue gas containing low
concentrations of carbon dioxide in this process, further enhancing its
environmental and economic benefits," he added.