Reclaiming graphite from spent lithium ion batteries ecologically and economically

Electrochimica Acta(2019)

Cited 113|Views6
No score
Abstract
It is extremely challenging to reclaim materials from spent lithium ion batteries that have more complicated chemistries than lead-acid batteries. In this work, a new approach is proposed to reclaim the graphitic anode materials from spent lithium ion batteries in electric vehicles, which involves a facile water treatment. With compositional and structural characterizations, it is found that the spent graphite anode still retains integrated graphitic structure with an inclusion of electrolyte decomposition products that are mainly responsible for the failure of a battery. Water treatment removes most of these impurities, opens Li+ transport channel and restores the graphite to be electrochemically active. After 100 cycles, the reclaimed graphite retains a capacity of 345 mAh g−1, which is comparable to the 347 mAh g−1 for commercial graphite. The approach we proposed requires neither harmful chemicals nor high temperature operation, providing a green and viable solution to the ever increasing threat caused by the vast mass of spent lithium ion batteries generated by electric vehicle industry.
More
Translated text
Key words
Spent lithium ion battery,Graphite anode,Reclaim,Economic effectiveness,Environmental friendliness
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined