METHOD FOR REGENERATING ALKALINE SOLUTIONS
20170025685 ยท 2017-01-26
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
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
C01F7/14
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Y02E60/10
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
H01M6/52
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H01M6/50
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
This invention relates to the regeneration of spent alkaline solutions, for example, alkaline electrolyte solutions used in metal/air batteries, specifically in aluminum/air batteries. The invention provides methods and systems to regenerate alkaline electrolyte solutions by adding water and optionally other solvents to spent electrolyte solutions, thus precipitating metal hydroxides from the spent electrolyte solution.
Claims
1. A method of treating a spent electrolyte solution of a metal-air battery, the method comprising: adding water and one or more organic solvent(s), or adding one or more organic solvent(s) to the spent electrolyte solution to induce precipitation of metal hydroxide, optionally with the help of seeding, separating the metal hydroxide precipitate from the aqueous-organic mother liquor, removing said organic solvent(s) from the mother liquor, and recovering a solution comprising aqueous alkali hydroxide.
2. (canceled)
3. The method of claim 1, wherein said organic solvent is selected from the group consisting of alcohols, ketones, dioxolane, dioxanes, tetrahydrofuran.
4. The method of claim 3, wherein said alcohol is methanol, ethanol, propanol or a combination thereof.
5. A method of operating an aluminum/air battery, comprising withdrawing from said battery a spent electrolyte solution of alkali metal aluminate, adding water and one or more organic solvent(s), or adding one or more organic solvent(s) to said solution to induce precipitation of aluminum hydroxide, separating the so-formed precipitate from the aqueous-organic mother liquor, removing said organic solvent(s) from the mother liquor and directing the mother liquor comprising aqueous alkali hydroxide back to said aluminum/air battery.
6. The method of claim 1, wherein said metal hydroxide is aluminum hydroxide or zinc hydroxide.
7. The method of claim 1, wherein said spent electrolyte comprises alkali metal aluminates and wherein said alkali-metal is sodium or potassium.
8. The method of claim 1, wherein said seeding comprising adding alumina powder, aluminum hydroxide powder, or zinc oxide powder as a seed to said electrolyte.
9. The method of claim 1, wherein said water is added in a volume ranging between 30%-80% from 100% volume of said spent electrolyte.
10. The method of claim 1, wherein said co-solvent is added in a volume ranging between 10%-300% from 100% volume of said spent electrolyte.
11. The method of claim 1, wherein said addition of water and one or more organic solvent(s) or said addition of one or more organic solvent(s) is conducted sequentially or by addition of a mixture.
12. The method of claim 1, wherein the step of removing said organic solvent from the mother liquor is conducted by distillation.
13. The method of claim 1, wherein following the step of removing said organic solvent from the mother liquor, said organic solvent is recycled.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0025] The subject matter regarded as the invention is particularly pointed out and distinctly claimed in the concluding portion of the specification. The invention, however, both as to organization and method of operation, together with objects, features, and advantages thereof, may best be understood by reference to the following detailed description when read with the accompanying drawings in which:
[0026]
[0027]
[0028]
[0029]
[0030]
[0031] In some embodiments, the % water addition is ranging between 10% and 300%.
[0032]
[0033]
[0034]
[0035]
[0036]
[0037]
[0038] It will be appreciated that for simplicity and clarity of illustration, elements shown in the figures have not necessarily been drawn to scale. For example, the dimensions of some of the elements may be exaggerated relative to other elements for clarity. Further, where considered appropriate, reference numerals may be repeated among the figures to indicate corresponding or analogous elements.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PRESENT INVENTION
[0039] In the following detailed description, numerous specific details are set forth in order to provide a thorough understanding of the invention. However, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that the present invention may be practiced without these specific details. In other instances, well-known methods, procedures, and components have not been described in detail so as not to obscure the present invention.
[0040] Metal-air battery anode (aluminum or aluminum-based alloys, or zinc or zinc alloys), when is operating in alkaline electrolyte, releases products of anodic metal oxidation into the electrolyte. It causes gradual saturation of electrolyte by metal ions (aluminate or zincate ions). This process of metal ion products accumulation in alkaline electrolyte, after a certain degree of saturation would prevent battery from further operation at required rate (by alkaline electrolyte here meant aqueous solution of inorganic base, such as, NaOH, KOH, or organic base, such as e.g. choline hydroxide). This spent electrolyte, which cannot be used anymore for battery operation, contains the bound alkalinity, which may be regenerated.
[0041] The disclosed invention provides a method, a process and a system which, being applied to the spent electrolyte, allows to obtain a regenerated alkaline solution, which is suitable for repeated metal-air battery operation. Moreover, the disclosed method allows to separately obtain the product of metal anode oxidation, in a form of a pure metal hydroxide, which is a valuable by-product.
[0042] The proposed process is based on shifting of equilibrium reactions (III) and (IV) to the right, as follows:
M.sup.+.sub.(aq)+Al(OH).sub.4(aq).sup..fwdarw.Al(OH).sub.3(solid)+MOH.sub.(aq)(III)
2M.sup.+.sub.(aq)+Zn(OH).sub.4(aq).sup.2.fwdarw.Zn(OH).sub.2(solid)+2MOH.sub.(aq)(IV) [0043] (where M is alkali cation, e.g K.sup.+ or Na.sup.+)
[0044] In the proposed method, such equilibrium shift is implemented by water addition (hydrolysis). It has now been found that addition of water to the spent electrolyte, for example, in an amount of not less than 10% v/v, and preferably not less than 20% v/v, e.g., from 30 to 70% v/v, results in the precipitation of metal hydroxide and release of free alkali. In some embodiments water is added at a ratio of from 10% to 300% of the total volume of the electrolyte. In some embodiments water is added in an amount of between 30%-80% of the total volume of the electrolyte. Volume percent is the percent of water added to 100% volume of spent electrolyte (e.g. 40% water means 40 ml added to each 100 ml of electrolyte).
[0045] The hydrolysis effect of water dilution may be explained (on the example of sodium aluminate) by a specific behavior of aluminate-hydroxide equilibrium (
[0046] In one embodiment, seed is added to the reaction mixture of the hydrolysis process, in order to improve the kinetics of precipitation, and to control the particle size of the newly formed metal hydroxide particles, which, in turn, enables better solid/liquid separation. Examples of seed material (not limited to) are alumina powder, aluminum hydroxide powder, or zinc oxide powder, added in an amount (calculated to the total surface area) of e.g. 1-5, or 5-20 m.sup.2 per liter of the reaction mixture of hydrolysis.
[0047] Metal hydroxide precipitate can be separated from the hydrolysis reaction mixture by any appropriate method of solid/liquid separation (gravitational sedimentation, vacuum or press-filtering, centrifugation). According to this aspect and in one embodiment, process of separation of small metal hydroxide particles usually results in the solids cake, containing non-negligible amount of liquid. Such a cake usually required additional treatment, such as pressing/squeezing, water washing, and/or air blowing in order to extract as much valuable entrapped alkali as possible.
[0048] In one embodiment of this invention, it was also established that water hydrolysis in combination with addition of certain organic co-solvent (examples are lower alcohols, such as methanol and ethanol, and/or ketones) may enhance the hydrolysis effect, causing more aluminate to decompose into aluminum tri-hydroxide precipitate. Co-solvent application allows the improvement of the degree of removal of metal ions from the spent electrolyte, and increases the free alkalinity content in the regenerated electrolyte. The boiling point of co-solvent in the method proposed in this invention should be lower than that of water, allowing easy and convenient removal of co-solvent from regenerated electrolyte by distillation, and recycling of the co-solvent in the process, as illustrated in
[0049] In one embodiment, the amount of co-solvent addition ranges from 10% to 300% (volume percent) added to the 100% volume of spent electrolyte.
[0050] In some embodiments, co-solvents added to the spent electrolyte include but are not limited to alcohols (such as methanol, ethanol, propanol or others), ketones, dioxolane and dioxanes, tetrahydrofuran, and or other water-miscible, or partly water-miscible organic solvents.
[0051] Although co-solvent application imposes an additional step in the process sequence of electrolyte regeneration by hydrolysis, it allows the improvement of the depth of metal ions removal (and corresponding bound alkali release) up to 90%, or more, comparing to 50-60% by water hydrolysis only. (see example 3 with 94% recovery).
[0052] As discussed above and in some embodiments, 90% refers to the percentage of free KOH in total KOH content of the regenerated electrolyte. See also
[0053] In some embodiments, the percent recovery of the KOH in the electrolyte is up to 98%. In some embodiments, the percent recovery of the KOH in the electrolyte is 98%. In some embodiments, the percent recovery of the KOH in the electrolyte ranges between 10% and 98%.
[0054] An example of spent electrolyte regeneration process sequence according to an embodiment of this invention is schematically shown in
[0055] Evaporator 4.4 may be separate vessel, or reactor 4.1 may serve as the evaporator, if equipped by proper heating and temperature regulation means. Filtrate liquid boils in the evaporator, and methanol vapors leaving the evaporator pass through condenser 4.5, and liquid methanol collected in accumulator 4.6. Regenerated methanol in accumulator 4.6 is then redirected to the reactor for treatment of the next batch of spent electrolyte. Liquid in evaporator, after accomplishing of the methanol (or other co-solvent) stripping is pumped into the regenerated electrolyte collector 4.7, where it can be stored, and eventually re-used in aluminum air battery operation.
[0056] In one embodiment, this invention provides a method of treating a spent electrolyte solution, comprising adding water to the spent electrolyte solution to induce precipitation of metal hydroxide, optionally with the help of seeding, separating the so-formed precipitate from the aqueous mother liquor and recovering an alkali hydroxide solution. In one embodiment, the method further comprising adding one or more water-miscible, low-boiling point organic solvent(s) to the spent electrolyte solution, separating the metal hydroxide precipitate from the aqueous/organic mother liquor, removing the organic solvent from the mother liquor, and recovering an aqueous alkali hydroxide solution. In one embodiment, the organic solvent is selected from the group consisting of alcohols, ketones, dioxolane, dioxanes, tetrahydrofuran. In one embodiment, the alcohol is methanol, ethanol, propanol or a combination thereof.
[0057] In one embodiment, this invention provides a method of operating an aluminum/air battery, comprising withdrawing from the battery a spent electrolyte solution of alkali metal aluminate, adding water to the solution to induce precipitation of aluminum hydroxide, separating the so-formed precipitate from the aqueous mother liquor and directing the mother liquor comprising aqueous alkali hydroxide back to an aluminum/air battery.
[0058] In one embodiment, the metal hydroxide is aluminum hydroxide or zinc hydroxide. In one embodiment, the spent electrolyte comprises alkali metal aluminates and wherein the alkali is sodium or potassium. In one embodiment, the seeding comprising adding alumina powder, aluminum hydroxide powder, or zinc oxide powder as a seed to the electrolyte. In one embodiment, the water is added in a volume ranging between 30%-80% from 100% volume of the spent electrolyte. In one embodiment, the co-solvent is added in a volume ranging between 10%-300% from 100% volume of the spent electrolyte.
[0059] In one embodiment, this invention provides a system for regenerating electrolyte. In one embodiment, systems of this invention allow regeneration of spent electrolyte by adding water and optionally co-solvents to the spent electrolyte.
[0060] In one embodiment, the term a or one or an refers to at least one. In one embodiment the phrase two or more may be of any denomination, which will suit a particular purpose. In one embodiment, about or approximately may comprise a deviance from the indicated term of 1%, or in some embodiments, 1%, or in some embodiments, 2.5%, or in some embodiments, 5%, or in some embodiments, 7.5%, or in some embodiments, 10%, or in some embodiments, 15%, or in some embodiments, 20%, or in some embodiments, 25%.
EXAMPLES
Materials
[0061] Spent electrolyte samples were obtained from an aluminum-air battery. To this end, a fresh electrolyte solution consisting of aqueous KOH solution (30 wt %) was allowed to circulate through an aluminum/air battery consisting of 10 cells at a flow rate of 6 L/min, until the concentration of the K[Al(OH).sub.4] solution was 140-180 g/liter (calculated as metal aluminum).
Methods
[0062] Aluminum and alkali content of the solutions was measured titrimetrically by the two-complexant procedure originally developed by Watts and Utley [Anal. Chem. 28, 1731 (1956)] and modified by Metrohm AG [Determination of total caustic, total soda and alumina in Bayer process liquors with 859 Titrotherm, Application Note 313e, METROHM AG]. Titration analysis was carried out with the help of Metrohm 859 Titrotherm device, operating under Metrohm Tiamo software.
[0063] Powder x-ray diffraction (XRD) patterns were recorded using BRUKER D8 ADVANCE X-ray Powder Diffraction device (Theta/theta geometry, Cu K-alpha radiation, 40 mA, 40 kV).
[0064] Particle size distribution measurement was carried out using Malvern Mastersizer 2000.
Example 1
Hydrolysis of Spent ElectrolyteLiquid Phase Composition of Treated and Non-Treated Electrolyte
[0065] The following experiments were carried out to demonstrate the effect of water addition to spent electrolyte solution of aluminum-air battery.
[0066] In the first experiment (comparative, non-treated), 100 ml of spent electrolyte solution having 147 g/L of aluminate (as Al) was added to a plastic can. The can was closed and allowed to stand at room temperature for a period of approximately 180 hours.
[0067] In the second experiment (water treated), 100 ml of the same spent electrolyte solution (147 g/L of dissolve Al) was added to a plastic can, followed by the addition of water (40 ml). The so-formed solution was stirred for two hours. The can was closed and allowed to stand at room temperature for a period of approximately 180 hours.
[0068] The two K[Al(OH).sub.4] solutions were sampled periodically during the 180 hours storage period and the concentration of aluminum dissolved in the aqueous phase was measured. The results are shown in
[0069] The upper curve, marked with triangles, demonstrates the results of the first experiment, devoid of water addition. The upper curve exhibits a slow decrease in the concentration of aluminum dissolved in the aqueous phase, indicating that the K[Al(OH).sub.4] species in the solution underwent almost no reaction to precipitate aluminum hydroxide and release potassium hydroxide.
[0070] The lower curve, indicated by open circles, relates to the second experiment. The lower curve demonstrates that water addition to the K[Al(OH).sub.4] solution causes a reduction in the concentration of the aluminum dissolved in the aqueous phase. A sharp drop is observed after the first day of experiment, followed by a slower rate of concentration change in the next days. It should be noted that the straight dashed line, which represents the theoretical concentration of aluminum calculated on the basis of the dilution factor due to water addition (147 g/L100/140=105 g/L) is located above the lower curve. It follows that the dilution of the solution cannot account for the measured reduction of the concentration of aluminum dissolved in the solution. Water addition advances aluminum precipitation in the form of aluminum hydroxide and advances a concurrent release of potassium hydroxide. This is shown by the following chemical reaction:
K.sup.+.sub.(aq)Al(OH).sub.4(aq).sup..fwdarw.Al(OH).sub.3(solid)+KOH.sub.(aq)
Example 2
Hydrolysis of Spent Electrolyte Solid Phase Characterization
[0071] The white precipitate formed in the K[Al(OH).sub.4] solution, following water addition, as set forth in Example 1, was separated by filtration. XRD analysis indicates that the isolated solid is the gibbsite (sometimes called hydrargillite) form of aluminum hydroxide.
Example 3
The Complete Cycle of Spent Electrolyte Regeneration by Hydrolysis (Water Only)
[0072]
[0073] In some embodiments, in order to improve the efficacy of the process, the wet cake may undergo a de-liquoring step, e.g., the wet cake may be squeezed by the application of pressure, to remove therefrom a secondary alkaline aqueous fraction, which can be combined with the previously collected mother liquor. The sixth and seventh bars illustrate the compositions of high-solids, squeezed filter cake consisting essentially of aluminum hydroxide, and a combined mother liquor collected in the process, respectively. On an industrial scale, of course, the foregoing solid/liquid separation step may be accomplished in any conventional industrial method, to minimize the amount of mother liquor contained in the filter cake, thereby collecting high-solids cake while maximizing the volume of the potassium hydroxide solution.
[0074] Final recovery level of KOH (ratio of free KOH to total KOH) is 50%: finally, in this example 1071 g of liquid was recovered. This recovered liquid, or regenerated electrolyte, had total KOH content 283 g, 135 g of each was established as free KOH (percentage of free KOH: 135 g/283 g=47.6%).
Example 4
Spent Electrolyte Regeneration by Methanol-Assisted Hydrolysis
[0075] Al-air battery was operated with 30% KOH solution until concentration of aluminum in the liquid was 180 g/L (as [Al]). Thus spent electrolyte (1 kg) was removed from the battery system and put to stirred vessel with reflux at 55 C. Warm water (55 C.) was added to the electrolyte in the vessel at volumetric ratio 0.7/1 (water to electrolyte). 10 g of seed (ATH from a previous experiment) was added. In the course of the next 16 hours methanol was added dropwise, up to the final volumetric ratio 2.3/1 (methanol to electrolyte), at continuous stirring. Two hours after water addition, temperature of the vessel was decreased to 40 C. 20 hours after water addition, the treatment was terminated, and the reaction mixture was filtered. Filtrate was stripped of methanol by distillation, and analyzed for KOH and aluminum content (3.4 g/L of [Al] was found in filtrate).
[0076] Final recovery rate of KOH was 94%.
[0077] Eventually, in this experiment 730 g of liquid were recovered (regenerated electrolyte), which contained 402 g of total KOH, 378 g of which appeared as free KOH (94%).
Example 5
Hydrolysis at Different Water Addition Ratio
[0078] Al-air battery was operated with 30% KOH solution until concentration of aluminum in the liquid was 155 g/L (as [Al]). Such spent electrolyte was withdrawn from the battery, and divided into several portion of known volume, each one was placed into the stirred plastic beaker. Water (DI) was added to each beaker, in such amounts, that range of values of volumetric ratio of water to spent electrolyte spanned between 50:100 and 450:100 (or from 50% to 450%). All beakers were stirred at room temperature during 12 hours. After that, slurries from each beaker were filtered of freshly precipitated aluminum tri-hydroxide, and [Al] and [KOH] concentrations were established in the filtrate liquid (by titration method, as previously mentioned).
[0079] Data, obtained in the experiment is presented in
[0080] It is seen that increasing of such ratio above value 80-100% does not contribute to the improvement of the yield of the hydrolysis process according to this embodiment.
Example 6
Methanol-Assisted Hydrolysis at Different Methanol Addition Ratio
[0081] Experiment with methanol-assisted hydrolysis, similar to that described in Example 4 of this invention, was repeated multiple times with different ratio of volumes of methanol to spent electrolyte (said ration was reported as % v/v of methanol amount to spent electrolyte amount, if spent electrolyte amount is taken as 100%.
[0082] KOH recovery (presented as a percentage of free KOH in total KOH), established in regenerated electrolyte samples, is presented in
[0083] It had been seen that positive effect of methanol addition ratio on the KOH recovery has a kind of saturation behavior, and addition of methanol at a ratio above 280-300% does not contribute further improvement to the KOH recovery according to this embodiment.
[0084] Different seeds were applied to the treatment samples in the current Experiment: a commercially available ATH (J.M.Huber Hydral 710), and a home-made ATH powder, prepared from the filtering cake of previous spent electrolyte treatment samples. On the graph shown in
[0085] While certain features of the invention have been illustrated and described herein, many modifications, substitutions, changes, and equivalents will now occur to those of ordinary skill in the art. It is, therefore, to be understood that the appended claims are intended to cover all such modifications and changes as fall within the true spirit of the invention.