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Recovery of critical metals from spent Li-ion batteries: Sequential leaching, precipitation, and cobalt–nickel separation using Cyphos IL104

Authors
Ilyas, SadiaRanjan Srivastava, RajivSingh, Vinay K.Chi, RuanKim, Hyunjung
Issue Date
Dec-2022
Publisher
PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
Keywords
E-waste; Resource recycling; NMC-cathode batteries; Critical metals; Ionic liquid
Citation
WASTE MANAGEMENT, v.154, pp.175 - 186
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
WASTE MANAGEMENT
Volume
154
Start Page
175
End Page
186
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/hanyang/handle/2021.sw.hanyang/172792
DOI
10.1016/j.wasman.2022.10.005
ISSN
0956-053X
Abstract
This study presents a novel recycling scheme for spent Li-ion batteries that involves the leaching of lithium in hot water followed by the dissolution of all transition metals in HCl solution and their separation using the ionic liquid Cyphos IL104. The parametric studies revealed that >84 % Li was dissolved while the cathode material was leached at 90 °C for 2 h. Approximately 98 % Li from the non-acidic solution was directly precipitated as Li2CO3 at a Li+:CO32− ratio of 1:1.5. The transition metals from the Li-depleted cathode mass were efficiently (>98 %) dissolved in 3.0 mol·L−1 HCl at 90 °C for a 3 h leaching process. Manganese from the chloride leach liquor was selectively precipitated by adding KMnO4 at a 1.25-fold higher quantity than the stoichiometric ratio, pH value 2.0, and temperature 80 °C. The remaining co-existing metals (Ni and Co) were separated from the chloride solution by contacting it with a phosphonium-based ionic liquid at an equilibrium pH value of 5.4 and an organic-to-aqueous phase ratio of 2/3. The loaded ionic liquid was quantitatively stripped in 2.0 mol·L−1 H2SO4 solution, which yielded high-purity CoSO4·xH2O crystals after evaporation of the stripped liquor. Subsequently, ∼99 % nickel was recovered as nickel carbonate [NiCO3·2Ni(OH)2] from the Co-depleted raffinate by the precipitation performed at Ni2+:CO32− ratio of 1:2.5, pH value of 10.8, and temperature of 50 °C. Finally, a process flow with mass and energy balances yielding a high recovery rate of all metals in the exhausted cathode powder of spent LiBs was proposed.
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COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING (DEPARTMENT OF EARTH RESOURCES AND ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING)
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