http://www.latimes.com/business/technology/la-fi-lithium-ion-battery-recycling-20180316-story.html
New way to recycle lithium-ion batteries could be a lifeline for electric
cars and the environment
Mar 16, 2018  Rob Nikolewski

[image  / Rob Nikolewski
http://www.latimes.com/resizer/u1smaUVxlrSpgCM9M76L3w5sLw4=/1400x0/arc-anglerfish-arc2-prod-tronc.s3.amazonaws.com/public/N3XOKI47IRB45LAZFV3XURC464.jpg
Zheng Chen, a professor of nanoengineering, holds a container of cathode
particles in a laboratory at UC San Diego
]

New way to recycle lithium-ion batteries could be a lifeline for electric
cars and the environment

The promise of a global electric-vehicle transformation has a looming
problem.

The cathodes in the lithium-ion batteries typically used in electric
vehicles are made of metal oxides that contain cobalt, a metal found in
finite supplies and concentrated in one of the globe's more precarious
countries.

But an assistant professor at UC San Diego says he has developed a way to
recycle used cathodes from spent lithium-ion batteries and restore to
perform as well as they did when new.

"Yes, it can work effectively," said Zheng Chen, a 31-year-old who works as
a nanoengineer at the Sustainable Power and Energy Center at UC San Diego's
Jacobs School of Engineering.

The method also works on lithium cobalt oxide, which is widely used in
electronic devices such as smartphones and laptops.

"In my house I have about six cellphones," Chen said. "I have probably about
five laptops. They all have lithium batteries. I thought, there is no clear
system to recycle and retrieve them. From a battery researcher [standpoint]
I know this is something we have to face, we have to solve."

How it works

The process takes degraded particles from the cathodes found in a used
lithium-ion battery. The particles are then pressurized in a hot alkaline
solution that contains lithium salt. Later, the particles go through a short
heat-treating process called annealing, in which temperatures reach more
than 1,400 degrees Fahrenheit.

After cooling, Chen's team takes the regenerated particles and makes new
cathodes. They then test the cathodes in batteries made in the lab.

The results, Chen said, have been impressive.

The new cathodes have been able to maintain the same charging time, storage
capacity and battery lifetime as the originals did.

"Originally I thought we couldn't get all this performance back, that we
would lose 10% or 20%," Chen said. "But it turns out we're getting exactly
the same performance."

Details of the recycling method were recently published in the research
journal Green Chemistry, submitted by Chen and two colleagues.

The next step

Now that the method has been established in the lab, the goal is to optimize
the process so it can be economical on an industrial scale.

Right now, the particles have to be picked out manually from the old,
conked-out battery. The entire cycle takes about 10 hours to complete, Chen
said. Researchers are working on a way to simplify and accelerate the
process.

How much would it cost to develop the technology to make it commercially
viable?

"It's very hard to give an accurate number, considering the scale," Chen
said. "I think we definitely need to scale up and make (recycling)
meaningful for the market."

The process developed at UC San Diego is essentially the same one used to
make the cathode particles in the original batteries.

"We're taking an old process and applying it to this new problem," Chen
said. "That's one of the beauties of this process … It's like you have Lego
pieces and you put them together, assemble them and you form this new
platform."

Implications

Less than 3% of lithium-ion batteries around the world are recycled, Chen
said. The batteries from used smartphones and laptops often end up in
landfills or tucked away in drawers and closets.

But the lithium-ion batteries in electric vehicles — or EVs — are much
larger, posing a long-term challenge as the zero-emissions sector grows and
policymakers seek a way to transition away from cars and trucks powered by
fossil fuels.

Gov. Jerry Brown wants 5 million zero-emission vehicles on California's
roads by 2030. Recent rules adopted by the government in China are expected
to push sales of EVs there to 1 million per year within two years.

It's harder to recycle the batteries used in EVs than the lead-acid
batteries used in gasoline-powered vehicles because of the number of
materials involved and differences in how manufacturers build them ...

Finding a way to recycle lithium-ion batteries on a large scale could
greatly reduce the demand — as well as curb the rising costs — for cobalt in
electric vehicles. It also could help alleviate the environmental concerns
surrounding aging batteries in smartphones, laptops and other digital
devices, as well as EVs.

The team at UC San Diego plans to work with battery companies in China and
has filed for a provisional U.S. patent.
[© 2018 Los Angeles Times]


+
https://technical.ly/baltimore/2018/03/19/bge-turns-electric-buses-employee-shuttle/
BGE rolls out electric buses for employee shuttle service
2018/03/19 ... employees from one location to another, but will also serve
as active research lab that will help us plan for and build out the
infrastructure necessary to support other fleets across our service area.”
BGE will also look to learn from the buses. The company will look to take
lessons in implementing electric vehicles statewide.
https://2h7qju2c3qvcc3s86ekn8n0-wpengine.netdna-ssl.com/baltimore/wp-content/uploads/sites/3/2018/03/proterra1-e1521484964343.jpg




For EVLN EV-newswire posts use:
 http://evdl.org/archive/


{brucedp.neocities.org}

--
Sent from: http://electric-vehicle-discussion-list.413529.n4.nabble.com/
_______________________________________________
UNSUBSCRIBE: http://www.evdl.org/help/index.html#usub
http://lists.evdl.org/listinfo.cgi/ev-evdl.org
Please discuss EV drag racing at NEDRA (http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NEDRA)

Reply via email to