METHODS FOR LITHIUM METAL PRODUCTION DIRECT FROM LITIUM BRINE SOLUTIONS
20250198029 ยท 2025-06-19
Assignee
Inventors
- Michael Z. HU (Austin, TX, US)
- AMIT PATWARDHAN (AUSTIN, TX, US)
- GEORGE Y. GU (Austin, TX, US)
- David KAPLIN (Austin, TX, US)
- Nicholas S. Grundish (Austin, TX, US)
- Sumanth CHEREDDY (Austin, TX, US)
- Teague M. EGAN (Austin, TX, US)
Cpc classification
C25C7/007
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
International classification
C22B3/26
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Abstract
Method(s) and apparatus for direct lithium extraction from brine solutions via a combined solvent extraction and electrowinning process. This process involves solvent extraction integrated with an electrodeposition of lithium metal from nonaqueous solutions to with the added feature of solvent regeneration. The direct lithium metal harvest from brines via a compatible solvent will reduce significantly operational and capital costs related to the current molten salt electrolysis methods for lithium metal production.
Claims
1. A method of preparing lithium metal comprising: (A) extracting lithium brine with a solvent to obtain a lithium solution; and (B) exposing the lithium solution to a voltage or current to obtain lithium metal.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein the lithium metal comprises a purity of at least 80%.
3. The method of claim 2, wherein the lithium metal comprises a purity of at least 90%.
4. The method of claim 3, wherein the lithium metal comprises a purity of at least 95%.
5. The method according to any one of claims 1-4, wherein the lithium brine comprises greater than 0.3 ppm of lithium.
6. The method of claim 5, wherein the brine comprises from about 50 ppm to about 75,000 ppm of lithium.
7. The method of claim 6, wherein the brine comprises from about 100 ppm to about 40,000 ppm of lithium.
8. The method according to any one of claims 1-7, wherein the solvent is immiscible with water.
9. The method according to any one of claims 1-8, wherein the solvent has a greater solubility for lithium than water.
10. The method according to any one of claims 1-9, wherein the solvent is an organic solvent.
11. The method according to any one of claims 1-10, wherein the solvent is a polar aprotic solvent.
12. The method of claim 11, wherein the solvent is a C1-C6 dialkyl carbonate.
13. The method of claim 12, wherein the solvent is diethyl carbonate.
14. The method according to any one of claims 1-13, wherein the method further comprises a second solvent.
15. The method according to any one of claims 1-14, wherein the method further comprises extracting the lithium solution with the second solvent to obtain a purified lithium solution.
16. The method of claim 15, wherein the method further comprises exposing the purified lithium solution to a voltage or current instead of the lithium solution.
17. The method according to any one of claims 14-17, wherein the second solvent has increased stability at the voltage than the solvent.
18. The method according to any one of claims 1-17, wherein the method comprises using at least two electrodes to apply the voltage or current.
19. The method of claim 18, wherein the method comprises using three electrodes.
20. The method of either claim 18 or claim 19, wherein the method comprises using a working electrode, a counter electrode, and a reference electrode.
21. The method according to any one of claims 1-20, wherein the method comprises applying a voltage from about 6 V to about 6 V.
22. The method of claim 21, wherein the voltage is from about 5 V to about 5 V.
23. The method of claim 22, wherein the voltage is from about 4 V to about 4 V.
24. The method according to any one of claims 1-23, wherein the method is performed continuously.
25. The method according to any one of claims 1-24, wherein the method further comprises returning the lithium solution after the lithium solution has been exposed to the voltage or current to the extraction step.
26. The method according to anyone of claims 1-25, wherein the method further comprises exposing the lithium containing solution or lithium brine with or without other soluble impurity ions to a lithium selective membrane.
27. The method of claim 26, wherein the lithium containing solution or lithium brine with or without other soluble impurity ions is exposed to the lithium selective membrane while the voltage is applied.
28. The method of claim 26, wherein the lithium containing solution or lithium brine with or without other soluble impurity ions is exposed to the lithium selective membrane before the voltage is applied.
29. The method according to any one of claims 1-28, wherein the lithium is deposited on the cathode.
30. The method of claim 29, wherein the lithium is deposited on a metal cathode.
31. The method of claim 30, wherein the lithium is deposited on a copper cathode.
32. The method according to any one of claims 1-31, wherein the lithium is deposited in a roll-to-roll method.
33. An apparatus for obtaining lithium metal comprising: (A) an extraction chamber; (B) a plating chamber; wherein the extraction chamber is in fluid communication with the plating chamber; wherein the plating chamber comprises a cathode and the extraction chamber comprises an anode.
34. The apparatus of claim 33, wherein the apparatus further comprises a lithium selective membrane.
35. The apparatus of either claim 33 or claim 34, wherein the lithium selective membrane is positioned between the extraction chamber and the plating chamber.
36. The apparatus according to any one of claims 33-35, wherein the apparatus further comprises a power source connected to the anode and cathode and capable of delivering a voltage or current.
37. The apparatus according to any one of claims 33-36, wherein the plating chamber further comprises a second reference electrode.
38. The apparatus according to any one of claims 33-37, wherein the cathode is configured to allow roll-to-roll deposition.
39. The apparatus according to any one of claims 33-38, wherein the extraction chamber is configured to allow mixing of liquid inside the chamber.
40. The apparatus according to any one of claims 33-39, wherein the extraction chamber is configured to allow only part of the liquid from the chamber to flow into the plating chamber.
41. The apparatus according to any one of claims 33-40, wherein the extraction chamber is configured to allow only part of the liquid from the chamber to flow into the plating chamber after passing through a desiccant chamber.
42. A system for cathodic electrodeposition of lithium (Li) onto a moving metal foil, the system comprising: (A) a containment cell carrying at least a lithium-containing solution; (B) a counter electrode extending in the containment cell; and (C) a working electrode extending in the containment cell, wherein the working electrode comprising a metal foil configured to be continuously moved through the lithium-containing solution via a roll-to-roll conveyance system, the counter electrode and the working electrode configured to be charged in such a manner as to drive electrodeposition of lithium onto the metal foil extending through the lithium-containing solution.
43. The system of claim 42, further comprising a cation exchange membrane carried in the containment cell and positioned between the counter electrode and the working electrode, the cation exchange membrane and the containment cell together defining a first chamber and a second chamber, the first chamber carrying the working electrode and configured to contain the lithium-containing organic solution, the second chamber carrying the counter electrode and configured to contain a lithium-containing aqueous solution.
44. The system of claim 43, wherein the cation exchange membrane defining a first cation exchange membrane, the system further comprising a second cation exchange membrane in the containment cell, the first and second cation exchange membranes defining a sandwiched liquid membrane therebetween, the sandwiched liquid membrane including a lithium solvent therein.
45. The system of claim 42, further comprising: a series of intermediate transport rolls for carrying the metal foil, the intermediate transport rolls configured to facilitate the definition of a plurality of foil sections, a given foil section being defined between a proximate pair of intermediate transport rolls, the counter electrode being the form of an anode, the anode defining a plurality of anode extensions, at least one anode extension configured to extend between an accompanying pair of adjacent foil sections.
46. A system for cathodic electrodeposition of lithium (Li) onto a metal foil, the system comprising: (A) a containment cell; (B) a counter electrode extending in the containment cell; (C) a working electrode extending in the containment cell, the working electrode comprising a metal foil; and wherein a cation exchange membrane carried in the containment cell and positioned between the counter electrode and the working electrode, the cation exchange membrane and the containment cell together defining a first chamber and a second chamber, the first chamber carrying the working electrode and configured to contain a lithium-containing organic solution, the second chamber carrying the counter electrode and configured to retain at least one of a lithium-containing aqueous solution or a lithium-containing brine, the counter electrode and the working electrode configured to be charged in such a manner as to drive both lithium ion movement through the cation exchange membrane and electrodeposition of lithium onto the metal foil contacting the lithium-containing organic solution.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0008] So that the manner in which the features, advantages and objects of the disclosure, as well as others which may become apparent, are attained and can be understood in more detail, more particular description of the invention briefly summarized above may be had by reference to the embodiment thereof which is illustrated in the appended drawings, which drawings form a part of this specification. It is to be noted, however, that the drawings illustrate only example embodiments of the invention and is therefore not to be considered limiting of its scope as the invention may admit to other equally effective embodiments.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE EMBODIMENTS
[0028] The methods and systems of the present disclosure can now be described more fully hereinafter with reference to the accompanying drawings in which embodiments are shown. The methods and systems of the present disclosure may be in many different forms and should not be construed as limited to the illustrated embodiments set forth herein; rather, these embodiments are provided so that this disclosure can be thorough and complete, and can fully convey its scope to those skilled in the art. Like numbers refer to like elements throughout.
[0029] Direct lithium extractions (DLE) from brines are a challenging problem. The most abundant lithium brine resources on earth, such as those in the South American Lithium Triangle (Argentina-Bolivia-Chile), are concentrated brines with a high level of total dissolved solids. These lithium brines are near-saturated mixed salt solutions containing salts of cations (primarily Li.sup.+, Na.sup.+, K.sup.+, Mg.sup.2+, Ca.sup.2+, B.sup.+ and H.sup.+) and anions (primarily Cl.sup.+, SO.sub.4.sup.2, and OH.sup.). Most direct lithium extraction technologies use fresh water to either elute the lithium from the adsorbent or strip it from a lithium selective solvent. However, areas where direct lithium extraction would be practiced are extremely arid, thus making their application more challenging.
[0030] There is a high projected demand for lithium metal as future high-capacity batteries are poised to use a lithium metal anode. Current worldwide production of lithium metal is very small, and a large demand-supply gap is projected. This disclosure presents a new, significantly lower cost approach to lithium metal production that uses no fresh water. This is accomplished by an integrated Solvent Extraction (SE) with a new Electrodeposition (ED) approach as shown in
[0031] In the disclosed method of lithium metal production directly from lithium brine, lithium-ions in the brines are selectively extracted into an added solvent medium by solvent extraction or membrane-assisted solvent extraction. The lithium-ions are then electrochemically deposited onto an electronically conductive substrate from the final lithium impregnated organic or inorganic solvent medium in a process known as electrowinning. This process can also be performed with a series of solvent extraction steps prior to electrowinning lithium metal out of an organic or inorganic solvent medium onto an electronically conductive substrate. Lithium salts that can be used to electrodeposit lithium include, but are not limited to LiCl, LiClO.sub.4, Li.sub.2SO.sub.4, or LiPF.sub.6. The final purity of the deposited lithium from the full process starting from a lithium brine can range from 80 to 99.99%. The final thickness of the lithium metal plated from the starting concentrated brine solution can range in thickness from 1 nm to 5 mm. A solvent must have several key features to enable integration in the disclosed process: (1) the solvent can highly solubilize or selectively extract dissolved Li-ions/salts from aqueous brines; (2) the solvent allows the cathodic deposition of Li metal; (3) the solvent has long-term stability to resist anodic reactive degradation in the electrochemical cell during processing; and (4) the solvent must be immiscible with water. In the case of membrane-assisted solvent extraction, a membrane will provide the selective permeation of lithium from brines to an added solvent.
[0032] The lithium metal product obtained from the above process can be further purified to serve as an anode material in a primary or secondary battery in which metallic lithium serves as at least one of the electrodes. Such battery chemistries that this process might produce viable metallic lithium metal electrodes for including, but not limited to Lithium-Oxygen batteries, Lithium-sulfur batteries, rechargeable lithium metal batteries with a lithium-ion intercalating cathode, Lithium-MnO.sub.2 primary batteries, and solid-state lithium metal batteries that contain a solid-state lithium-ion conductor as the electrolyte as opposed to a liquid electrolyte with a solvated lithium-ion conducting salt.
[0033] Battery-grade lithium metal requires additional purification after the lithium metal ingot is produced from molten salt electrolysis to obtain lithium metal that is >99.8% purity needed for secondary battery operation and an additional step for electrode fabrication for lithium metal to be used in a secondary battery. The disclosed technology can bypass the purification step and the electrode fabrication step to directly produce battery-grade lithium metal in an electrode form. Lithium metal electrodes fabricated with the disclosed method can be between 1 nm and 5 mm. This process can be performed roll-to-roll to produce a full commercial scale roll of lithium metal plated on copper electrode for use in commercial fabrication of lithium metal secondary batteries, limiting the number of process steps and further reducing the cost of production for lithium metal electrodes for relevant battery chemistries.
A. Devices for Practicing the Separations
[0034]
[0035] In relation to
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[0038] In comparing
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[0040] The roll-to-roll process cell 320 of
[0041]
[0042] Furthermore, with respect to
[0043] In an embodiment, the linear speed (v) of the copper web driven, the electrical deposition current (i) applied, the width (w) the lithium layer deposited, and the current efficiency () of the lithium deposition can be correlated by:
where Q is the total charge passed therethrough. Q is related to the quantity of lithium metal deposited on the cathode surface. For example, for lithium with a single positive charge, each charge corresponds to a single lithium atom.
[0044] The electrodeposition time can be defined by the following equation:
[0045] In order to deposit a useful lithium metal for battery anode, it can be important to control the plating current density and the thickness. In an embodiment, the lithium deposition rate can be controlled at a current density ranged from 0.2 mA/cm.sup.2 to 0.8 mA/cm.sup.2 and a thickness range equivalent of 1 mAh/cm.sup.2 to 100 mAh/cm.sup.2, where mA=milliamps; cm=centimeters; and h=hours. Per above, the thickness range equivalent can be considered to be proportional to the thickness produced, given that each charge corresponds to a single lithium atom. Using the two ranges, the electrodeposition time can be calculated using Equations 1 & 2. For example, if an equivalent total of 100 mAh/cm.sup.2 of Li is to be plated while doing so at a rate of 0.2 mA/cm.sup.2, the total deposition time converts to 500 hours. Based on such conditions for Li electroplating, the deposition time may range, for example, from 1.25 to 500 hours, based on the parameters chosen and the thickness/thickness equivalent desired.
[0046] In an embodiment, a design with an increase to the overlap of the cathode and anode can enable a large electroplating time while still allowing for a reasonable linear production speed. It is to be understood that various design architectures can be employed to achieve the electroplating conditions.
[0047] Note that the processing cell configuration is necessarily not limited to the illustrative designs shown in the above-described figures. Besides the variation in organic solution engineering, the electrode design and material type can be easily modified for better performances, and such modifications are considered to be within the scope of the present disclosure. Further, unless otherwise expressly excluded, it is to be understood that components described with respect to the various embodiments may be mixed and/or matched with respect to one another. Additionally, while copper has been discussed as a candidate material upon which to electro-deposit lithium, it is to be understood that other conductive metals or metal alloys may serve as appropriate substrates upon which to deposit the lithium.
[0048] In summary, one or more embodiments of the present disclosure can result in (1) a roll-to-roll Li metal film (battery anode) production technology; and/or a lithium-metal production and lithium-ion extraction technology from either aqueous solutions or from organic solutions. The integrated hybrid solvo-electro-processing can enable the simultaneous lithium extraction and metal production in a single-stage batch or continuous operation. The solvo-processing can take advantage of the organic solutions as a Lit-transporting medium suitable for electrodeposition or as a solvent(s) for selective extraction of lithium from aqueous brines. In the former case, a Li.sup.+-selective membrane (solid CEM or liquid) between the aqueous phase and organic phase can add Li.sup.+-transporting selectivity for DLE (direct lithium extraction) from the source brine. The electro-processing of the present disclosure can utilize the electrically enhanced rate of electrodialysis (for lithium extraction and transporting mobility) and/or electrodeposition (for Li metal film production). The Aqueous-Organic biphase electrodialysis can be uniquely implemented in extracting/transporting lithium from aqueous brines/solutions into an organic solution medium. Relative to the competing electrowinning processing for Li metal production, the present technology can provide (1) lower cost option for Li metal film production as battery anode (<20 m thick); and/or (2) simultaneous DLE from aqueous brine and Li metal film electrodeposition in a single integrated process.
[0049] The present technology can manifest itself in one or more features. The technology can allow combined Li extraction (from aqueous brine) and Li metal (battery anode) production simultaneously in a continuous process, which needs no processing water. The process can be operated in either a roll-to-roll (R2R) or batch mode for Li metal production (via electrodeposition of Li from an organic phase) and/or continuous lithium extraction from aqueous brines. The technology can implement an organic phase as an electrodeposition medium that can be either lithium salt-soluble or lithium ion-selective (like those organic solutions obtained from solvent extraction). The system can feature a dewatering method that can control the water content of the organic phase, thus allowing sustained electrodeposition of Li metal with better current efficiency and/or better quality of Li metal fil deposit. The method associated herewith can yield a faster direct lithium extraction (DLE) rate from aqueous brines because of the larger Lit concentration gradient between an aqueous and organic phase driven by electrodeposition phenomenon. The integrated process can take advantage of an electrodialysis-like phenomenon for faster ion mobility and/or transport from an aqueous phase into an organic phase. The present system can allow for lower temperature (e.g., room temperature and/or ambient), lower cost processing than molten-salt electrowinning. A R2R version of the present system and method can be used to directly produce a thin film deposit of Li metal on copper foil web, which can be used, for example, as a suitable platform for a Li battery anode.
[0050] Below are proof-of-principle example cases that provide methods and specific conditions to enable lithium metal electrodeposition from a solvent-extracted solutions. The invention here is by no means limited to these examples.
Example 1: Lithium Deposition from an Organic Solvent with LiPF.SUB.6 .as an Ionically Conducting Salt
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[0052] Specifically, in one embodiment, the electrochemical cell uses a cathode copper rod as the working electrode that is electrically insulated on the side such that only the well-defined circular flat surface (0.5 cm.sup.2) at the bottom end is exposed to the electrolyte solution. A glass encapsulated reference electrode (Ag/AgCl (1M KCl)) faces (<1-mm gap) is used as the reference electrode. A platinum foil ring anode is placed concentrically at the bottom part of the electrodeposition cell to serve as the counter electrode. The above specified components are shown in
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Li.sup.+e.sup..fwdarw.Li3.045 V (Cathodic reductive reaction for Li metal deposition)
AgCl+e.sup..fwdarw.Ag.sup.++Cl.sup.0.2223 V (Reference electrode, Ag/AgCI (1M KCl))
2H.sup.++2e.sup..fwdarw.H.sub.2 0.00V (Standard Hydrogen Electrode, SHE)
[0054] To produce a meaningful amount of metallic lithium, a chronoamperometric experiment was performed in which the voltage of the electrochemical cell was held constant, and the current was recorded as a function of time. The results from this experiment are presented in
[0055] In the later stage of the electrodeposition, dendritic lithium metal forms (
[0056] Where m=mass of deposited species (g), MW=molecular weight of the deposited species, I=current (A), t=time(s), n=electron equivalent/mole, and F=Faraday's constant (96,485.3 C/eq or A-s/eq). For the lithium metal deposition process described herein, MW is 6.941 g/mole, and n=1 electron/mole. The other values of the equation are either experimentally measured, experimentally applied, or physical constants.
[0057] The equation can be rewritten to determine the rate of lithium plating or lithium deposition:
[0058] If I is unknown but m/t is known then equation can be rewritten once more to solve for the required current to be applied to obtain a desired deposition rate:
[0059] This final equation can be used to regulate the deposition rate during the process in the method described in this invention to obtain a lithium metal electrode of a desired thickness for use in primary or secondary lithium metal batteries.
Example 2: Scalability Demonstration for Electrowinning of Lithium Metal for Commercial Lithium Metal Electrode Production
[0060] The copper rod cathode surface in the previous example had a limited surface area for lithium deposition (0.5 cm.sup.2). To enlarge the surface for cathodic electrodeposition of Li metal, a long strip of copper was used as the working electrode as opposed to a single end-face of a copper rod. This copper strip had an electrochemically active surface area that was over 10 times greater than the face of the copper rod that was used in the original lithium electrowinning experiments. This enlargement of the working electrode demonstrates the scalability of this approach towards commercial applications, which require lithium to be deposited on a copper substrate up to three meters wide on a roll-to-roll basis.
[0061] Similar proof-of-concept experiments as with the previous example were performed for this larger copper substrate working electrode. A linear sweep voltammogram is presented in
[0062] The disclosed method for lithium metal production from brine may be easily modified to utilize existing commercial electroplating or electrowinning equipment or components. The electrowinning cell can take advantage of the roll-to-roll cathodic deposition for scalable, large surface area deposition of lithium metal onto a substrate surface that is submerged and pulled through the platting electrolyte medium. An example of this embodiment can include rolling copper foil through a liquid lithium electrolyte medium to plate lithium metal on the copper foil substrate. Some existing commercial electrodeposition cells, such as industrial electrowinning or electroplating cells, may be modified and adapted for this room-temperature hybrid solvent extraction and electrowinning process.
Example 3: Membrane-Assisted Lithium Metal Production from Concentrated Lithium Brine
[0063] One embodiment of the enclosed methods allows for the use of a cation exchange membrane to assist in the separation of lithium-ions from concentrated lithium brine into an alternative solvent media that lithium metal may then be plated from. An electrochemical cell that may be used in this process is schematized in
[0064] The Specification, which includes the Summary, Brief Description of the Drawings and the Detailed Description, and the appended Claims refer to particular features (including process or method steps) of the disclosure. Those of skill in the art understand that the invention includes all possible combinations and uses of particular features described in the Specification. Those of skill in the art understand that the disclosure is not limited to or by the description of embodiments given in the Specification.
[0065] Those of skill in the art also understand that the terminology used for describing particular embodiments does not limit the scope or breadth of the disclosure. In interpreting the Specification and appended Claims, all terms should be interpreted in the broadest possible manner consistent with the context of each term. All technical and scientific terms used in the Specification and appended Claims have the same meaning as commonly understood by one of ordinary skill in the art to which this invention belongs unless defined otherwise.
[0066] As used in the Specification and appended Claims, the singular forms a, an, and the include plural references unless the context clearly indicates otherwise. The verb includes and its conjugated forms should be interpreted as referring to elements, components or steps in a non-exclusive manner. The referenced elements, components or steps may be present, utilized or combined with other elements, components or steps not expressly referenced. The verb operatively connecting and its conjugated forms means to complete any type of required junction, including electrical, mechanical or fluid, to form a connection between two or more previously non-joined objects. If a first component is operatively connected to a second component, the connection can occur either directly or through a common connector. Optionally and its various forms means that the subsequently described event or circumstance may or may not occur. The description includes instances where the event or circumstance occurs and instances where it does not occur.
[0067] Conditional language, such as, among others, can, could, might, or may, unless specifically stated otherwise, or otherwise understood within the context as used, is generally intended to convey that some implementations could include, while other implementations do not include, certain features, elements, and/or operations. Thus, such conditional language generally is not intended to imply that features, elements, and/or operations are in any way required for one or more implementations or that one or more implementations necessarily include logic for deciding, with or without user input or prompting, whether these features, elements, and/or operations are included or are to be performed in any particular implementation.
[0068] The systems and methods described herein, therefore, are well adapted to carry out the objects and attain the ends and advantages mentioned, as well as others inherent therein. While example embodiments of the system and method have been given for purposes of disclosure, numerous changes exist in the details of procedures for accomplishing the desired results. These and other similar modifications may readily suggest themselves to those skilled in the art and are intended to be encompassed within the spirit of the system and method disclosed herein and the scope of the appended claims.