Apparently there is serious problem with lithium ion (Li) batteries used in electric cars and for storage energy. The BBC he says that the most widely used methods of recycling batteries do not work at all well, as Li batteries are "bigger, heavier, much more complicated and even dangerous if disassembled incorrectly".
In an average battery recycling plant, the parts of the battery are ground into powder and then this powder is either melted (pyrometallurgy) or dissolved in acid (hydrometallurgy).
But lithium-ion batteries are made up of many different parts that could explode if not carefully disassembled. Even when lithium batteries are damaged in this way, the products are not easy to reuse.
"The current method of shredding everything and trying to clean a complex mixture leads to expensive procedures for low-value products," says Andrew Abbott, a physicochemist at the University of Leicester.
The result is that their recycling costs more than the extraction of lithium for the construction of new ones. Also, due to the fact that there are no cheap ways to recycle Li batteries, only about 5% of lithium ion batteries are recycled worldwide, which means that all the rest ends up somewhere.
The article states that there are many laboratories working to develop more efficient and environmentally friendly ways to recycle lithium batteries.
Disassembly of lithium batteries is currently done mainly by hand, something that will have to be changed to reduce costs.
"In the future, we will need more technology in disassembly," says Abbott. "If a battery is assembled using robots, it should be able to be disassembled in the same way."
Abbott's team at the Faraday Institute in the United Kingdom is investigating the robotic disassembly of Li batteries as part of the ReLib project, which specializes in recycling and reusing lithium batteries.
The team seems to have found a way to faster recycle the ascent and descent using an ultrasound detector, "like the one your dentist uses to clean your teeth," says Abbott.
"It focuses the ultrasound on a surface and creates tiny bubbles that explode and eject the coating from the surface."
With this process there is no need to manually separate the battery components. According to research by Abbott's team, this recycling method with supersounds can process 100 times more material in the same time than a traditional hydrometallurgical method. It also states that it can be done for less (half) than the cost of creating a new battery from new material.
Another idea - the complete replacement of lithium ion batteries with something more environmentally friendly:
Jodie Lutkenhaus, a professor of chemical engineering at Texas A&M University, is working on a battery made up of many organic substances that can be turned off on demand.
"Many batteries today are not recycled due to the relative cost of energy and labor," says Lutkenhaus.
"Batteries that are deactivated on demand can simplify or reduce recycling costs. Finally, these products could be reconstituted again in a new battery, closing the life cycle of the materials. ”
It's a new argument, given that even if a lithium battery is disassembled and its parts repaired, there will still be some components that can not be saved and become waste. A battery like the one the Lutkenhaus team is preparing could be a more sustainable source of energy.