Process for the recycling of lithium battery electrode materials
11050098 · 2021-06-29
Assignee
Inventors
- Kamyab AMOUZEGAR (Mont-Royal, CA)
- Patrick BOUCHARD (Shawinigan, CA)
- Nancy Turcotte (St-Tite, CA)
- Karim Zaghib (Longueuil, CA)
Cpc classification
C01B25/45
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Y02W30/84
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
Y02P10/20
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
C22B7/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
H01M10/0525
ELECTRICITY
International classification
C01B25/45
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C22B7/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Abstract
A process for the recycling of an electrochemically active material is described. The process comprises the steps of reacting the electrochemically active material with an oxidizing agent or a reducing agent in a solvent without addition of a strong acid, to produce a lithium salt and a delithiated electrochemically active material precipitate. This precipitate is separated from the lithium salt and used in the regeneration of the electrochemically active material.
Claims
1. Process for the recycling of an electrochemically active material, the process comprising the steps of: a) reacting the electrochemically active material with an oxidizing agent or a reducing agent in a solvent excluding the presence of a strong acid to produce a lithium salt in solution and an electrochemically active material precursor solid; b) separating the electrochemically active material precursor solid from the lithium salt in solution; and c) regenerating the electrochemically active material from the electrochemically active material precursor solid, the electrochemically active material precursor solid having been separated from the lithium salt in solution, wherein the electrochemically active material precursor solid remains solid during step a) and b).
2. The process of claim 1, wherein step (a) further comprises injecting gaseous CO.sub.2.
3. The process of claim 1, wherein the lithium salt contains lithium bicarbonate and the process further comprises heating the lithium salt in solution to generate gaseous CO.sub.2 and recovering gaseous CO.sub.2 and a recycled lithium salt.
4. The process of claim 1, wherein the oxidizing agent comprises hydrogen peroxide.
5. The process of claim 1, wherein the oxidizing agent comprises ozone.
6. The process of claim 1, wherein the oxidizing agent comprises oxygen.
7. The process of claim 1, wherein the oxidizing agent comprises a persulfate salt.
8. The process of claim 7, further comprising after step (b) a step of submitting the lithium salt to an electrolysis, a sodium salt solution, or a CO.sub.2 injection, and recovering a recycled lithium salt.
9. The process of claim 3, wherein the recycled lithium salt is used to regenerate the electrochemically active material.
10. The process of claim 1, wherein the solvent is water.
11. Process for the recycling of an active electrode material of a lithium battery, the process comprising the steps of: reacting the active electrode material with CO.sub.2 in an aqueous medium and in the presence of an oxidizing or reducing agent without strong acid addition, in order to separate the lithium content as lithium bicarbonate in a liquid phase and to recover a totally or partially delithiated active electrode material as a solid phase; and treating the liquid phase to recover a lithium salt for recycling in the manufacture of new electrode material by reacting with the totally or partially delithiated active electrode material recovered from the solid phase.
12. The process of claim 11, wherein the CO.sub.2 pressure is between 1 and 10 atm.
13. The process of claim 12, wherein the CO.sub.2 pressure is between 1 and 5 atm.
14. The process of claim 11, wherein the reaction temperature is between 10 and 30° C.
15. The process of claim 14, wherein the reaction temperature is between 20 and 25° C.
16. The process of claim 11, wherein the reaction temperature is below room temperature.
17. The process of claim 11, wherein the oxidizing or reducing agent is hydrogen peroxide, said hydrogen peroxide being used in stoichiometric or slight excess amount with respect to the quantity of active electrode material.
18. The process of claim 11, wherein the active electrode material is LiFePO.sub.4, wherein the solid phase contains FePO.sub.4 at high purity, the FePO.sub.4 maintaining its crystalline structure.
19. The process of claim 11, wherein the liquid phase is heated to high temperature, forming a lithium carbonate precipitate, CO.sub.2 gas and a solution containing residual lithium carbonate and bicarbonate, wherein the lithium carbonate precipitate is separated, dried and recycled in the manufacture of new active electrode material, and wherein the released CO.sub.2 gas and a solution containing residual lithium carbonate and bicarbonate are used in the process for the recycling of active electrode material.
20. The process of claim 19, wherein the liquid phase is heated to a temperature of 85° C. to 95° C.
21. Process for the recycling of active electrode material from a lithium battery, the process comprising the steps of: reacting the active electrode material with lithium persulfate in an aqueous medium to form a liquid phase containing lithium sulfate in solution and a solid phase comprising a transition metal oxide; separating the solid phase for recycling towards the manufacture of new active electrode material; and recovering the liquid phase.
22. The process of claim 21, wherein the recovered liquid phase is separated into a first and a second fractions, wherein: the first fraction is used as material added to an anolyte of an electrolytic cell in which the lithium sulfate is re-oxidized to lithium persulfate for reuse in the treatment of other active electrode materials; and the second fraction is used to recover the lithium as lithium carbonate, by treatment with CO.sub.2 or with a carbonate salt, or as lithium hydroxide, by salt dissociation electrolysis.
23. The process of claim 21, wherein the reaction is carried out between 5 and 60° C.
24. The process of claim 23, wherein the reaction is carried out between 20 and 40° C. in order to keep the lithium persulfate stable.
25. The process of claim 22, wherein the first fraction is converted into lithium hydroxide and sulfuric acid by electrolysis, the lithium hydroxide being further reacted with ammonium persulfate to produce lithium persulfate.
26. The process of claim 25, wherein the reaction between the lithium hydroxide and the ammonium persulfate is carried out under vacuum, and wherein gaseous NH.sub.3 is generated, recovered and recycled in the formation of ammonium sulfate, said ammonium sulfate being added to the anolyte of an electrolytic cell to produce ammonium persulfate.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(11) This application relates to a process for the recycling of electrochemically active material from lithium batteries. More particularly, the subject of the present application relates to the recovery of electrochemically active components of the electrode material once it has been separated from the rest of the battery elements.
(12) New approaches that achieve a selective extraction of the lithium component from the electrochemically active electrode material, without the use of strong acid or high temperature conditions, are presented hereafter.
(13) In a first aspect, an electrode material recovered from the separation of battery components and comprising the electrochemically active material is contacted with an oxidizing agent or a reducing agent contained in a solvent, optionally in the presence of CO.sub.2. This step excludes the presence of a strong acid such as hydrochloric acid, sulfuric acid, nitric acid, etc. The selection of the oxidizing or reducing agent depends on the type of electrode material used. The present process may be adapted to cathode material recycling or to anode material recycling. The first step of the process is therefore the reaction of the electrochemically active material with an oxidizing agent or a reducing agent in a solvent. This produces a lithium salt and an electrochemically active material precursor precipitate (i.e., a totally or partially delithiated electrochemically active material), thereafter referred to as the precursor precipitate. In an embodiment, the mixture comprising the electrochemically active material is dispersed in the solvent. In a preferred embodiment, the solvent is water, and the lithium salt produced is in solution.
(14) The electrochemically active material may be an oxide, a complex oxide, a phosphate, a silicate, etc. For example, it could be LiFePO.sub.4, or any other electrochemically active material known to the person skilled in the art. In the case of LiFePO.sub.4, the precursor precipitate formed is FePO.sub.4. The produced lithium salt may be, for instance, LiHCO.sub.3, or Li.sub.2SO.sub.4. An example of a useful oxidizing agent is hydrogen peroxide (H.sub.2O.sub.2). Other oxidizing agents may be used, such as oxygen (O.sub.2), ozone (O.sub.3), air, etc. The skilled addressee will recognize that hydrogen peroxide can be used both as an oxidizing and a reducing agent. The oxidizing or reducing agent can be used in stoichiometric amounts or slightly in excess (i.e. an excess of from 5 mol % to 10 mol %) with respect to the transition metal to be oxidized or reduced. The person skilled in the art will appreciate that the oxidizing or reducing agent may, however, be used in larger excess.
(15) The first reaction step of the process may also comprise the injection of CO.sub.2 into the solution. CO.sub.2 is bubbled in the solution and increases the lithium salt solubility in the solvent. This thereby increases the leaching efficiency of the process. For example, as illustrated in
(16) Since the kinetics of the reaction between the electrochemically active material and the oxidizing or reducing agent is quite fast at room temperature, there is no need for high temperature conditions. The reaction mixture may be cooled below room temperature in order to increase the lithium bicarbonate solubility. However, for economic reasons, the reaction may be carried out between 10 and 30° C., or between 20 and 25° C. In fact, at higher temperatures, the solubility of the lithium salt (e.g. lithium carbonate) decreases, which requires reactors with higher volumes and a lower lithium recovery. The reaction may be carried out in a reactor at atmospheric pressure or at a higher pressure. It was observed that the solubility of the lithium salt increases with a raise in CO.sub.2 pressure. However, at pressures beyond 10 atm., the solubility starts reaching a plateau and there is only a little gain in solubility. Therefore, the reaction pressure will preferably be between 1 and 10 atm.
(17) In a second step, the produced mixture of lithium salt and precursor precipitate is subjected to separation. Since the precursor precipitate remains solid during the reaction, it can be separated from the lithium salt solution by any separation technique known to the person skilled in the art, for example, by filtration or centrifugation.
(18) Once the precursor precipitate and lithium salt are separated, the process comprises the regeneration of the electrochemically active material from said precursor precipitate.
(19) Therefore, in an embodiment of the present technology, the recycling process comprises a regeneration step. The precursor precipitate recovered in the separation step is used for the manufacturing of new lithium electrochemically active materials. In some embodiments, the regeneration step also comprises the recovery of the lithium comprised in the lithium salt. The lithium recovery involves heating the lithium salt recovered from the separation to produce a recycled lithium salt, gaseous CO.sub.2 and a residual lithium salt solution. The lithium salt can be heated at a temperature of 50° C. to 100° C., preferably at a temperature of 85° C. to 95° C. In some embodiments, the lithium salt is heated at high temperature, preferably around 90° C. The recycled lithium salt is then used in the manufacturing of new electrochemically active materials, and the recovered gaseous CO.sub.2 can be reinjected in the first reaction step of the present process. Finally, the residual lithium salt solution can also be reintroduced in the reaction mixture of the previously mentioned first step.
(20) In an embodiment of the process, illustrated in
2LiFePO.sub.4(S)+H.sub.2O.sub.2+2CO.sub.2.fwdarw.2LiHCO.sub.3+2FePO.sub.4(S) (eq. 1)
(21) The lithium salt is recovered in the liquid phase as lithium bicarbonate, which can be recycled as a lithium salt, for example as a solid lithium carbonate (Li.sub.2CO.sub.3) precipitate without the addition of any other chemical reagent.
(22) The iron phosphate (FePO.sub.4) formed during the first reaction step remains as a solid and can be separated from the suspension. An X-ray diffraction analysis shows that the FePO.sub.4 crystalline structure remains intact, so that this material can be easily returned to the manufacturing of new LiFePO.sub.4 cathode material. For example,
2LiHCO.sub.3.fwdarw.Li.sub.2CO.sub.3(S)+H.sub.2O+CO.sub.2↑ (eq. 2)
(23) As illustrated in
(24) In another aspect of the present technology, the electrode material recovered from the separation of the battery components and comprising the electrochemically active material is contacted with an oxidizing or reducing agent contained in a solvent. The oxidizing agent can be a persulfate salt. This contacting produces a lithium salt and an electrochemically active material precursor precipitate (precursor precipitate). In an embodiment, the mixture comprising the electrochemically active material is dispersed in the solvent. The solvent may be water, so that the lithium salt is recovered as a lithium salt solution. The reaction can be carried out between 5° C. and 60° C., but more particularly between 20° C. and 40° C. Indeed, at higher temperatures, the persulfate will be less stable.
(25) In one embodiment, the lithium salt produced during the first reaction step is highly soluble in the solvent, such that it is not necessary to use CO.sub.2 to increase the lithium salt solubility.
(26) As previously described, the lithium salt and precursor precipitate produced in the reaction step are submitted to a separation step. Since the precursor precipitate remains in solid state during the reaction, it can be separated from the lithium salt solution by filtration, centrifugation, etc.
(27) Following the separation step, the process comprises the regeneration of the electrochemically active material from the precursor precipitate, which can be used directly in the manufacture of new electrochemically active materials.
(28) In some embodiments, the regeneration step further comprises the recovery of the lithium comprised in the lithium salt. To do so, the lithium salt recovered from the separation step is submitted to an electrolysis, to a sodium salt or to CO.sub.2.
(29) In some embodiments, part of the lithium salt is recovered as a persulfate salt and is re-used as oxidizing or reducing agent in the first reaction step. The remainder of the recovered lithium salt may be converted to other lithium salts such as lithium carbonate (using CO.sub.2 or sodium carbonate) or lithium hydroxide (by electrolysis) in order to be re-used in the manufacture of lithium battery electrochemically active materials (such as LiFePO.sub.4).
(30) In one embodiment, lithium hydroxide may be used to produce lithium persulfate (Li.sub.2S.sub.2O.sub.8) through its reaction with ammonium persulfate ((NH.sub.4).sub.2S.sub.2O.sub.8). The released ammonia (NH.sub.3) can be recovered to form ammonium sulfate ((NH.sub.4).sub.2SO.sub.4) through reaction with sulfuric acid obtained from the lithium sulfate (Li.sub.2SO.sub.4) electrolysis. The ammonium sulfate formed in this manner can be easily transformed into ammonium persulfate by its direct electrolysis.
(31) In a preferred embodiment, illustrated in
2LiFePO.sub.4(S)+Li.sub.2S.sub.2O.sub.8.fwdarw.2Li.sub.2SO.sub.4+2FePO.sub.4(S) (eq. 3)
(32) Regarding
2LiOH+(NH.sub.4).sub.2S.sub.2O.sub.8.fwdarw.Li.sub.2S.sub.2O.sub.8+2NH.sub.3↑ (eq. 4)
(33) The above reaction is carried out under vacuum, and preferably with an inert gas bubbling into the solution, in order to quickly evacuate the released gaseous ammonia and to minimise its reaction with the ammonium persulfate. The ammonia can be recycled and used in the formation of ammonium sulfate by its reaction with the sulfuric acid formed during the electrolytic transformation of lithium sulfate into lithium hydroxide. The ammonium sulfate is then used in the electrolytic production of ammonium persulfate that is then used for producing lithium persulfate according to equation 4.
(34) The following examples are for illustrative purposes and should in no way be interpreted to limit the scope of the invention as described in the present application.
EXAMPLES
Example 1
(35) In order to simulate the application of the proposed lixiviation (or leaching) conditions based on the use of gaseous CO.sub.2 and an oxidizing agent, a new cathode material mainly containing LiFePO.sub.4 along with small amounts of polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF) and graphite, was used to represent the recovered used electrode material. One part of this material was dispersed in 100 parts of an aqueous solution containing 0.5 wt % of H.sub.2O.sub.2 in an agitated reactor, CO.sub.2 gas being bubbled into the aqueous solution, under a pressure of 30 psi, and at 25° C. The LiFePO.sub.4/H.sub.2O.sub.2 molar ratio was therefore of 2.77. Samples were collected every 30 minutes and the concentration of Li, Fe, and P in the solution were determined by inductively coupled plasma (ICP) analysis. The results were then used to calculate the leaching efficiency of the process towards each element. Those results are presented in
(36) When the same reaction was carried out in the presence of the same LiFePO.sub.4/H.sub.2O.sub.2 ratio but in absence of CO.sub.2, only 3% of lithium was extracted. In addition, when CO.sub.2 alone was used to treat the electrode material, even at a CO.sub.2 pressure of 75 psi, only 12% of lithium was extracted (see table 1 below). These results demonstrate that the presence of both CO.sub.2 and H.sub.2O.sub.2 is essential for the high efficiency of lithium leaching. In all cases, the extraction is very selective towards lithium, as evidenced by the leaching efficiencies for Li and Fe in table 1.
(37) TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Li leaching Fe leaching Leaching conditions efficiency (%) efficiency (%) Leaching with H.sub.2O.sub.2 3% <0.1% Leaching with CO.sub.2 12% 0.2% Leaching with CO.sub.2 and H.sub.2O.sub.2 100% 0.3%
Example 2
(38) For comparative purposes, the same reaction was carried out with sulfuric acid instead of CO.sub.2. One part of a cathode material containing LiFePO.sub.4 was added to a 4M H.sub.2SO.sub.4 aqueous solution under two different conditions, one in the presence of 5 wt % H.sub.2O.sub.2 and the other in the absence of H.sub.2O.sub.2. In both cases the suspension was heated to 75° C. under agitation, and filtered samples from the aqueous phase were analysed by ICP to determine the Li and Fe content at different time intervals. As illustrated in
Example 3
(39) The experiment presented in Example 1 was repeated but this time with five times the amount of solid. Therefore, 5 parts of cathode material were suspended into 100 parts of an aqueous solution containing 0.5 wt % of H.sub.2O.sub.2 in an agitated reactor, CO.sub.2 gas being bubbled into the solution under a pressure of 30 psi and at 25° C. In this case, the LiFePO.sub.4/H.sub.2O.sub.2 molar ratio was 0.55, which only represents a slight excess of 10% in terms of the stoichiometric amount of H.sub.2O.sub.2 needed for a complete leaching of Li.
(40) Comparison of examples 1 and 3 results confirms that the amount of oxidizing or reducing agent can be kept around stoichiometric ratio. A stoichiometric excess of only 10% allows for lithium leaching efficiency of more than 92%. The person skilled in the art will understand that, for economic reasons, and since excess amounts of oxidizing or reducing agent may be lost in subsequent steps of the present process, said agent may be kept at or very close to the stoichiometric ratio.
Example 4
(41) In order to validate that a high leaching efficiency can still be reached at even higher solid/liquid ratios, the experiment of example 3 was modified using 10 parts of cathode material suspended in 100 parts of an aqueous solution containing 1 wt % of H.sub.2O.sub.2, with a CO.sub.2 pressure of 30 psi. Once more, Li leaching efficiencies of around 90% were obtained, whereas the operation resulted in leaching rates of less than 0.5% for Fe and less than 2.5% for P.
(42) This again confirms the high selectivity of the present lithium extraction process. Additionally, since the FePO.sub.4 solid is kept intact, it can be easily recovered by simple filtration. In fact, the X-Ray diffraction analysis of the filtered solid phase showed a content of 97.7% FePO.sub.4 and 2.7% LiFePO.sub.4, suggesting an even higher Li leaching efficiency (see
Example 5
(43) In this example, 7.5 parts of solid LiOH were dissolved in 100 parts of water and added to an agitated reactor containing an aqueous solution of 35.5 parts of (NH.sub.4).sub.2S.sub.2O.sub.8 in 150 parts of water. The mixture was stirred for 3 hours, the reactor being under a vacuum to facilitate the evacuation of released gaseous NH.sub.3. The Li.sub.2S.sub.2O.sub.8 formation and NH.sub.3 elimination were monitored by observing the solution pH which decreased from 14 to around 10, indicating the presence of very small amounts of NH.sub.3 and thereby confirming the completion of the reaction according to the following equation:
2LiOH+(NH.sub.4).sub.2S.sub.2O.sub.8.fwdarw.Li.sub.2S.sub.2O.sub.8+2NH.sub.3↑
(44) The Li.sub.2S.sub.2O.sub.8 containing solution was then used to treat 21 parts of cathode material. As it may be seen from
(45) X-ray diffraction analysis of the filtered solid confirmed the recovery of Fe and P as FePO.sub.4 in the solid phase (a FePO.sub.4 content above 99.7%).
Example 6
(46) The experiment presented in Example 1 was repeated by dispersing one part of the same type of cathode material mainly containing LiFePO.sub.4, in 100 parts of water, and agitating and bubbling of CO.sub.2 gas, all in a reactor. This time, the hydrogen peroxide was replaced with ozone as oxidizing agent. Gaseous ozone (generated by an ozone generator fed with oxygen) was injected into the aqueous dispersion at a rate of about 4 gr/h. The reactor pressure was maintained at 5 psi and the reaction temperature was of about 25° C. As can be observed in
Example 7
(47) The test presented in Example 6 was repeated using a different oxidizing agent, in this case, gaseous oxygen. Here again, one part of the same type of cathode material mainly containing LiFePO.sub.4 was dispersed in 100 parts of water, the dispersion being stirred in a reactor. Gaseous oxygen and CO.sub.2 were bubbled into the reactor at a flow rate of about 1.8 L/min while maintaining the reactor pressure at 30 psi and its temperature at about 25° C. The Li, Fe and P leaching efficiency as a function of time is presented in
Example 8
(48) The experiment presented at Example 7 was repeated under the same conditions but in replacing oxygen with air as oxidizing agent. The results (presented in
(49) Therefore, the present process provides a selective and efficient leaching of lithium comprised in a recovered used electrode material, without the use of strong acid or critical pressure and temperature conditions. This allows for the regeneration of the electrochemically active material of lithium batteries at lower economic and environmental costs, compared to conventional methods.
(50) Numerous modifications could be made to one or the other of the above-mentioned embodiments without departing from the scope of the present invention. The references, patent or documents from scientific literature mentioned in the present application are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety and for all purposes.