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Article

Material and Waste Flow Analysis for Environmental and Economic Impact Assessment of Inorganic Acid Leaching Routes for Spent Lithium Batteries’ Cathode Scraps

Department of Resources Engineering, National Cheng Kung University, Tainan 70101, Taiwan
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Batteries 2023, 9(4), 207; https://doi.org/10.3390/batteries9040207
Submission received: 29 December 2022 / Revised: 25 March 2023 / Accepted: 28 March 2023 / Published: 30 March 2023
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Recycling of Lithium-Ion Batteries: Current Status and Future Outlook)

Abstract

:
With the development trend and technological progress of lithium batteries, the battery market is booming. This means that the demand for lithium batteries has increased significantly, resulting in a large number of discarded lithium batteries. The consumption of plenty of lithium batteries may lead to the scarcity and expending of relevant raw material metal resources, as well as serious heavy metal environmental pollution. Therefore, it is of great significance to recycle valuable metal resources from discarded lithium batteries. The proper recycling of these valuable metals can reduce the shortage of mineral resources and environmental hazards caused by a large number of scrapped vehicle batteries. Recently, different systematic approaches have been developed for spent lithium battery recovery. However, most of these approaches do not account for the hidden costs incurred from various processing steps. This work is determined by the concept of material flow cost accounting (MFCA). Hence, in this research, a MFCA-based approach is developed for the leaching process of spent lithium batteries recovery, taking into consideration the hidden costs embedded in process streams. In this study, hydrochloric acid had the worst leaching efficiency due to its high solid-to-liquid ratio and the lowest acid concentration, so it was excluded in the first stage selection. It takes TWD 16.03 and TWD 24.10 to leach 10 g of lithium battery powder with sulfuric acid and nitric acid, respectively. The final sulfuric acid was the acid solution with the highest leaching efficiency and relatively low cost among inorganic acids.

1. Introduction

Lithium batteries, due to their long storage life and superior energy density [1], are often used in computers, mobile phones, cameras, and car batteries [2,3]. PHEVs, HEVs, and EVs can effectively reduce exhaust emissions compared to gasoline vehicles, thus helping to reduce air pollution and the greenhouse effect [4,5]. Each year, it is estimated that 17,000, 19,000, 65,000, and 22,000 tons of Li, Co, Ni, and Mn are consumed for the production of lithium batteries for vehicles [5]. By 2030, the growing demand for lithium batteries for vehicles is expected to increase the consumption of these valuable metals to 185,000, 180,000, 925,000, and 177,000 tons per year, respectively [5]. According to the US Geological Survey report for 2023 [6], the main raw materials for lithium batteries are concentrated in a few countries. Approximately 70% of lithium production is concentrated in Australia and Chile, approximately 70% of cobalt production is concentrated in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Indonesia [7], and approximately 70% of manganese production is concentrated in South Africa. Due to limited natural resources and geographically concentrated ore deposits, the valuable metals from discarded lithium batteries are considered valuable recyclable waste streams [8,9]. Compared to the primary production of metal resources (ore mining), secondary resources (recovering metal resources from discarded lithium batteries) are less dependent on geographical factors and can also reduce supply chain and raw material cost instability [7]. Therefore, it is extremely important to recover these valuable metals from discarded lithium batteries in scrapped cars [10].
State-of-the-art industrial processes for recycling spent lithium batteries mainly use pyrometallurgy or hydrometallurgy approaches. Pyrometallurgy involves melting spent lithium batteries at extremely high temperatures (>1000 °C) to recover the metal resources from the remaining slag. In contrast, hydrometallurgy is an energy-efficient method that uses concentrated corrosive acids to dissolve and extract metals at room temperature (25 °C) with a higher recovery efficiency than pyrometallurgy [11]. Inorganic acids such as hydrochloric acid, sulfuric acid, and nitric acid [12,13,14,15,16] have been commonly used to leach spent lithium batteries, and various systematic approaches have been developed [17]. However, most of the existing approaches for spent lithium battery recovery do not consider the high experimental counts required for factorial designs. The statistical approach of “Design of Experiments” allows for the variation of multiple factors simultaneously to screen the “reaction space” for a particular process, enabling the evaluation of a large number of reaction parameters with relatively few experiments [18]. Taguchi’s design is a more efficient and systematic alternative to Trial-and-Error, One-Factor-at-a-Time (OFAT), and Full-Factor Design (FFD). This method can address the problem of having a huge number of experimental counts [18,19,20,21] in a variable setting from the chosen levels for experimentation [22,23].
Material Flow Cost Accounting (MFCA), a tool of Environmental Management Accounting (EMA), provides an opportunity for us to accurately capture waste cost information [24]. By analyzing the flow of materials and energy in a production process, MFCA offers detailed and in-depth waste cost information [25]. The MFCA system will integrate well into a lab-scale recycling process that collects considerable detailed waste data for the leaching process [26]. According to Strobel and Redmann [27], MFCA considers four types of costs: material, system, energy, and waste management costs. These costs are attributed to specific activities associated with the generation of products and waste streams [28,29]. Most of the developed spent lithium batteries recovery approaches do not account for the hidden costs incurred from various processing steps. This research aims to determine which leaching process (sulfuric acid, hydrochloric acid, and nitric acid environment) can offer the highest leaching rate by examining five key parameters (temperature, solid-to-liquid ratio, time, acid concentration, and the amount of H2O2 added) and the relatively low leaching cost using the Material Flow Cost Accounting method.

2. Materials and Methods

2.1. Materials

The cathode materials of spent lithium batteries were used in this study. To ensure safety, the spent lithium batteries (NCM111) were fully discharged in a saturated NaCl solution for 24 h. After that, they were manually disassembled and separated to extract the ternary cathode material. Using a crusher and sieving (80-mesh) can reduce the contents of aluminum, which is an impurity in cathode materials during the leaching process, because it avoids chunks of aluminum foil being incorporated easily. Table 1 lists the main metal contents of the cathode materials of spent lithium batteries. Given that the contents of aluminum and iron were quite low, the influence on the leaching procedure was deemed negligible. Figure 1 illustrates the results of the XRD analysis, showing that the major peaks of NCM powder at 18.683°, 36.723°, and 44.463° confirm the presence of crystalline NCM111 (LiNi0.33Co0.33Mn0.33O2) as the dominating phase. Analytical grade chemicals were obtained from Echo Chemical Co., Ltd., Miaoli, Taiwan, and all aqueous solutions were prepared using deionized water.

2.2. Equipment

To control the temperature during the experiment, a thermostatic bath with magnetic stirring (Shin-Kwang Precision Industry Ltd., Gwangju, Korea) was employed. The concentration of metal ions in the solutions obtained after the leaching experiments was determined using Atomic Absorption Spectroscopy (AAS, PerkinElmer AA900, Waltham, MA, USA).

2.3. Inorganic Acid Leaching

The leaching experiments were conducted in a 250 mL Erlenmeyer flask by charging a known amount of cathode scrap powder in 100 mL of leaching reagents containing hydrochloric acid, sulfuric acid, nitric acid, and ultrapure water. The leaching efficiency was mainly influenced by five key factors, namely temperature, solid-to-liquid ratio (S/L ratio), time, acid concentration, and the amount of H2O2 added. To perform the leaching experiment, a L16 (45) orthogonal array based on Taguchi’s design was employed. This orthogonal array comprised 5 control factors, each with 4 levels, leading to a total of 16 experiments. The control factors included temperature (°C), solid-to-liquid ratio (g L−1), time (min), acid concentration (mol L−1), and the amount of H2O2 added (vol%). The range of the temperature was 60–90 °C, the range of the solid-to-liquid ratio was 5–40 g L−1, the range of the time was 10–80 min, the range of the acid concentration was 0.5–4.0 mol L−1, and the range of the amount of H2O2 added was 0–4.0 vol%. Firstly, the leaching efficiency was defined using Formula (1) and orthogonal table experiments were completed. Secondly, by analyzing the leaching efficiency, the impact of the control factors on the leaching efficiency was determined. Finally, a confirmation experiment was carried out to identify the optimal leaching parameters. In addition, when the optimal parameters for the leaching of all acids were identified, the total leaching efficiency was used in this study to find the optimal leached acids. The total leaching efficiency was defined using Formula (2):
L % = V 1 ( L ) × C 1 ( g L 1 ) M 1 ( g ) × W 1 × 100 %
where L was the leaching efficiency, M1 was the mass of the alloy sample, W1 was the metal content of the alloy sample, V1 was the volume of the leach solution, and C1 was the mass concentration of the metal in the leach solution.
X a = X L i × X C o × X N i × X M n × 100 %
where Xa was the total leaching efficiency, XLi was the leaching efficiency of Li, XCo was the leaching efficiency of Co, XNi was the leaching efficiency of Ni, and XMn was the leaching efficiency of Mn.

2.4. Material Flow Cost Accounting

The costs associated with the leaching process were divided into four categories under the MFCA calculations, namely material cost, energy cost, system cost, and waste management cost [27]. Depreciation was the primary item considered in the system cost category, while the waste management cost focused on solid waste. In this study, each leaching unit was considered as a quantity center (QC), and all inputs and outputs were determined. The cost of leaching 10 g of spent lithium batteries using various inorganic acids was analyzed, and both physical and monetary units were included in the material flow balance equation for the calculation system. Waste is considered a by-product of MFCA. The information required for material flow cost accounting comprised the material flow system and a defined database, which was used as the basis for calculating the quantities, values, and costs related to the flow model (Table 2). Table 2 illustrates the amount of money spent on 4 materials (H2SO4, HCl, HNO3, and H2O2), 2 types of energy (water and electricity), 2 depreciation items (thermostatic bath with magnetic stirring and vacuum pump), and 1 waste type (solid waste) in the leaching process at lab scale. The units were measured in New Taiwan Dollars (TWD). The prices for hydrogen peroxide, sulfuric acid, hydrochloric acid, and nitric acid were obtained by Sin-Sin Chemical Co., Ltd. (Tainan, Taiwan). The water fee was determined based on the price charged by Taiwan’s water supply company, which was TWD 12.08 per 1000 L. The electricity bill was calculated based on the electricity price table provided by the Taiwan Power Company, which was TWD 3.79 per kWh. The waste was analyzed at around TWD 0.056 per gram of solid waste treatment by the National Cheng Kung University Environmental Resources Center.

3. Results and Discussion

3.1. Taguchi Design

The Taguchi design is a promising approach that can be used to address a plethora of experimental count problems in a variable setting, given the reduced number of experiments required. As a result, the careful selection of the variable setting and levels chosen is crucial. It is argued by many that improving the leaching efficiency and accelerating the leaching reaction were the most significant ways to impact the leaching process. For instance, based on the shrinking core from the chemical, diffusion, and mixed control perspectives, the effect of the reaction temperature on the leaching can be attributed to an increase in the reaction temperature, improving the rate of external diffusion [30]. Additionally, various leaching studies [31,32] have shown that increasing the acid concentration is advantageous for leaching lithium, cobalt, nickel, and manganese. The leaching efficiencies for metals (Li, Ni, Co, and Mn) were significantly increased due to the higher concentration of acidic solution, which more easily destroyed the bonding of M-O (M: Li, Ni, Co, and Mn) in lithium batteries [33]. The solid-to-liquid ratio (S/L ratio) in the current research was determined by the ratio of the weight of the cathode scrap powder to the volume of the leaching solution (g L−1). Industrially, a high S/L ratio was desirable to improve the processing throughput; however, an increase in the S/L ratio always results in a lower leaching efficiency. This indicated that a lower S/L ratio can enlarge the contact areas of solids (the cathode scrap powder) and liquids (acidic solution) to accelerate the leaching reactions [34]. In most leaching cases, it is essential to add H2O2 (reductant) as compounds containing metal ions with a valence higher than +2 are insoluble. The metal valence must be reduced to +2 to dissolve the compounds easily in the form of complexes with inorganic acids. Reducing the metal valence may weaken the chemical bond in the insoluble compounds, making dissolution easier [35,36]. It is frequently believed that for solid/liquid reactions, increasing the contact time between reagents favors the dissolution reaction [36]. Based on the leaching kinetics model, it can be more clearly explained that the leaching efficiency of lithium, cobalt, nickel, and manganese increases with the increase in the leaching time [37]. Therefore, the setup of the orthogonal experiment is based on the five variable settings. In our previous study [32], the priority order of the leaching process from lithium batteries by a sulfuric acid-based system was as follows: amount of H2O2 > solid-to-liquid ratio > sulfuric acid concentration > temperature > time. The priority order of the leaching process from lithium batteries by a hydrochloric acid-based system was as follows: hydrochloric acid concentration > amount of H2O2 > solid-to-liquid ratio > temperature > time. The priority order of the leaching process from lithium batteries by a nitric acid-based system was as follows: amount of H2O2 > nitric acid concentration > solid-to-liquid ratio > time > temperature.

3.2. Sulfuric Acid Leaching

The degree of the influence and sequence of each parameter on the leaching process were determined using a previous orthogonal experiment. Regarding the sequence of the influencing factors, the experiment should be carried out in the order of their effect. As shown in Figure 2a, the leaching efficiency of Li, Co, Ni, and Mn increased with the amount of hydrogen peroxide added. The optimal leaching efficiencies for Li, Co, Ni, and Mn were achieved at 1.5 vol.% of hydrogen peroxide, which were 91.91, 87.89, 82.51, and 99.47%, respectively. The effect of the solid-to-liquid ratio on the leaching efficiency was presented in Figure 2b. In this part, the parameter with the highest solid-to-liquid ratio and no significant decrease in the leaching efficiency was selected as the optimal parameter, which was 25 g L−1. The effect of the acid concentration on the leaching efficiency was shown in Figure 2c, where it was found that the acid concentration strongly affected the leaching efficiency. A leaching efficiency of less than 50% was observed for the four metals at an acid concentration of 0.5 mol L−1. No significant improvement in the leaching efficiency was observed until the acid concentration of 2 mol L−1, which was chosen as the optimal parameter. Temperature and time had little effect on the leaching efficiency, as seen in Figure 2d,e. The leaching rate was very fast and could be effectively achieved within 15 min, as shown in Figure 2e. Based on the above results, the optimal conditions for achieving high leaching efficiencies for Li, Co, Ni, and Mn were determined to be: 1.5 vol.% of hydrogen peroxide, 25 g L−1 of the solid-to-liquid ratio, 2 mol L−1 of the acid concentration, temperature of 60 °C, and 15 min of leaching time. The leaching efficiencies achieved under these conditions were 96.41%, 82.53%, 89.25%, and 99.99%, respectively.
The optimization results of the sulfuric acid leaching parameters were compared with those of other studies [38,39], as presented in Table 3. This study was able to dissolve similar metal contents at lower temperatures and shorter leaching time conditions. This was the result of optimizing the leaching efficiency using the Taguchi method in this study.

3.3. Hydrochloric Acid Leaching

In this investigation, hydrochloric acid was used to leach Li, Co, Ni, and Mn. The influence and sequence of each leaching parameter on the process was determined by an orthogonal experiment from the previous study. The priority order for the leaching process from lithium batteries by a hydrochloric acid-based system was as follows: hydrochloric acid concentration > amount of H2O2 > solid-to-liquid ratio > temperature > time. Figure 3 follows this above priority order for further in-depth exploration of each factor. The hydrochloric acid concentration played a significant role in the leaching process. As the hydrochloric acid concentration increased from 0.5 mol L−1 to 1.0 mol L−1, the leaching efficiency of Li, Co, Ni, and Mn increased from 85.25% to 94.52%, 79.03% to 87.78%, 66.75% to 87.07%, and 97.27% to 99.99%, respectively. In the absence of H2O2 in the leaching solutions, the leaching efficiencies were only 86.08% for Li, 53.04% for Co, 40.04% for Ni, and 53.18% for Mn. When the H2O2 concentration was increased to 1.0 vol%, the leaching efficiencies increased to 91.88% for Li, 88.52% for Co, 97.47% for Ni, and 99.99% for Mn. The leaching efficiency decreased as the solid-to-liquid ratio increased. The results indicated that the leaching efficiencies for Li, Co, Ni, and Mn were nearly constant in the solid-to-liquid ratio of 15–20 g L−1. However, when the solid-to-liquid ratio was increased to more than 20 g L−1, the leaching efficiencies for all of the metals decreased dramatically. The leaching efficiencies for Li, Co, Ni, and Mn increased as the temperature increased. When the temperature was increased to 70 °C, the leaching efficiencies reached 93.20% for Li, 82.19% for Co, 91.37% for Ni, and 99.99% for Mn. The maximum leaching efficiency could be obtained when the reaction time was 12 min. Based on the results, the optimal theoretical conditions can be determined as a hydrochloric acid concentration of 1.0 mol L–1, amount of H2O2 of 1.0 vol%, solid-to-liquid ratio of 20 g L–1, temperature of 70 °C, and reaction time of 12 min.
The optimization results for the hydrochloric acid leaching parameters were compared with other studies [40,41], as shown in Table 4. This study was able to dissolve similar metal contents at lower acid concentrations and in less time. This is the result of optimizing the leaching efficiency using the Taguchi method in this study.

3.4. Nitric Acid Leaching

In this investigation, nitric acid was used to leach Li, Co, Ni, and Mn. The degree of influence and sequence of each parameter in the leaching process were determined through orthogonal experiments in a previous study. The priority order of the leaching process from lithium batteries using a nitric acid-based system was as follows: amount of H2O2 > nitric acid concentration > solid-to-liquid ratio > time > temperature. Figure 4 follows the above priority order for further in-depth exploration of each factor. When the amount of H2O2 added was increased to 0.5 vol%, the leaching efficiencies significantly increased to 87.41% for Li, 82.26% for Co, 97.25% for Ni, and 90.48% for Mn. With an increase in the nitric acid concentration from 0.5 mol L−1 to 1.5 mol L−1, the leaching efficiencies increased from 90.48% to 92.01% for Li, from 78.91% to 83.74% for Co, from 96.63% to 99.99% for Ni, and from 82.89% to 86.42% for Mn. However, a further increase in the nitric acid concentration to 2.0 mol L−1 did not cause a significant change in the leaching efficiencies. A higher solid-to-liquid ratio always resulted in a lower leaching efficiency. Figure 4c illustrates that the leaching efficiency decreased rapidly when the solid-to-liquid ratio reached 15 g L–1. The leaching efficiencies remained stable with a reaction time of 15 min. The leaching efficiencies for Li, Co, Ni, and Mn increased as the temperature increased. When the temperature reached 70 °C, the most significant change in the Ni leaching efficiency was an increase from 84.13% to 92.08%. Based on the results, the optimal theoretical conditions could be determined as follow: amount of H2O2 of 0.5 vol%, nitric acid concentration of 1.5 mol L–1, solid-to-liquid ratio of 10 g L–1, reaction time of 15 min, and temperature of 70 °C.
The optimization results for the nitric acid leaching parameters were compared with another study [42], as shown in Table 5. This study was able to dissolve similar metal contents at lower temperature and time conditions. This is the result of optimizing the leaching efficiency using the Taguchi method in this study. In addition, according to studies [43] on leaching in lithium batteries, after the leaching process, all metal ions would be present in the solution in the form of Li+, Ni2+, Co2+, and Mn2+.

3.5. Overall Leaching Efficiency

This section compiled the findings from Section 3.1, Section 3.2 and Section 3.3. Table 6 presents the leaching efficiency of each acid under optimal leaching conditions. Sulfuric acid demonstrated the highest leaching rate owing to its higher acid concentration. Nitric acid had the second-highest total leaching efficiency. Hydrochloric acid displayed the lowest leaching efficiency due to its high solid-to-liquid ratio and the lowest acid concentration.

3.6. Material Flow Cost Accounting

In this case study, it was assumed that the cathode materials from spent lithium batteries had zero cost because the process wastes were collected from electric vehicle manufacturing; thus, it is practically impossible to allocate a cost to wastes. Moreover, the cost of the cathode materials from spent lithium batteries had no effect on the MFCA calculations, as the purpose was to calculate the total cost of the leaching process and the cost associated with each treatment unit. To perform complete MFCA calculations, it was necessary to determine the material, energy, system, and depreciation costs for each QC. The expenditure of the materials, energy types, depreciation items, and waste types in the leaching process at the lab scale were prorated for all QCs. The depreciation items were assumed to be ignored in the calculation of the total cost, which had no effect on comparing which leaching system provided the lowest cost in this project, as the same equipment was used during the leaching process. The cost accounting of the leaching process, using 10 g of spent lithium batteries cathode scraps under sulfuric acid, hydrochloric acid, and nitric acid environment, based on reconciled data, is shown in Table 7, Table 8 and Table 9, respectively. As can be seen from the Table, the main expenditures on materials were the acid solution and hydrogen peroxide in each QC. In the materials, considerably more than 50% of the money spent was on hydrogen peroxide compared to the acid solution in each leaching process. Since nitric acid is a powerful oxidizing agent, the amount of H2O2 added was slightly less than in the other systems. However, the amount of acid used was twice that of the other two, resulting in a higher material cost. In terms of energy consumption, more than 90% of the money spent was on electricity in each leaching system. Consequently, the reaction time would have a considerable impact on the energy expenditure of the procedure. The money spent on solid waste was slightly lower than that spent on sulfuric and nitric systems compared to a hydrochloric system. Hydrochloric acid leaching systems will be the most competitive in the future as landfill disposal becomes more and more expensive. Overall, the total expenditures of the sulfuric system and hydrochloric system were approximately two-thirds of those in a nitric environment. The expense of the energy consumption and the amount of acid added of the nitric system were much higher than those of the other systems. The amount of money spent on the 2 energy types (electricity and water) and materials in a nitric environment was TWD 12.14 and TWD 11.46, respectively.

3.7. Selection of Leachate

The process of selecting the optimal leachate is shown in Figure 5. In the first stage, hydrochloric acid was eliminated because it had the lowest total leaching efficiency. Subsequently, nitric acid was excluded based on cost analysis as it requires a considerable amount of leaching solution, leading to high expenses. Finally, sulfuric acid was deemed the most suitable leaching acid, as it exhibited the highest leaching efficiency and a relatively low cost.

4. Conclusions

This study examined the optimal leaching parameters of three different acids: sulfuric acid, hydrochloric acid, and nitric acid. The study revealed that sulfuric acid had the highest total leaching efficiency of 71.01% at a temperature of 60 °C, an acid concentration of 2.0 mol L−1, a solid-to-liquid ratio of 25 g L−1, a time of 15 min, and hydrogen peroxide addition of 1.5 vol.%. Meanwhile, hydrochloric acid had a total leaching efficiency of 60.26% under the conditions of a temperature of 70 °C, an acid concentration of 1.0 mol L−1, a solid-to-liquid ratio of 20 g L−1, a time of 12 min, and hydrogen peroxide addition of 1.0 vol.%. Furthermore, nitric acid had a total leaching efficiency of 65.48% at a temperature of 70 °C, an acid concentration of 1.5 mol L−1, a solid-to-liquid ratio of 10 g L−1, a time of 15 min, and hydrogen peroxide addition of 0.5 vol.%. Hydrochloric acid was excluded from further consideration due to its low total leaching efficiency.
Furthermore, this study assessed the leaching costs of using sulfuric acid and nitric acid to leach 10 g of lithium battery powder. The cost of leaching 10 g of powder with sulfuric acid was TWD 16.03, whereas the cost of leaching the same amount of powder with nitric acid was TWD 24.10. This difference in cost can be attributed to the higher amount of nitric acid required to leach the same amount of powder as sulfuric acid due to the lower leaching solid-to-liquid ratio. As a result, this study selected sulfuric acid as the optimal leaching acid due to its high leaching efficiency and relatively low cost.
In conclusion, this study determined that sulfuric acid was the most effective and cost-efficient acid for leaching among the inorganic acids examined, based on the results obtained using the Taguchi method and the MFCA method.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, J.-Z.W. and Y.-C.T.; methodology, J.-Z.W. and Y.-C.T.; validation, J.-Z.W. and Y.-C.T.; investigation, J.-Z.W. and Y.-C.T.; resources, J.-Z.W., Y.-C.T. and C.-M.C.; data curation, J.-Z.W., Y.-C.T. and C.-M.C.; writing—original draft preparation, J.-Z.W. and Y.-C.T.; writing—review and editing, J.-Z.W. and Y.-C.T.; supervision, Y.-H.S.; project administration, Y.-H.S. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research received no external funding.

Institutional Review Board Statement

Not applicable.

Informed Consent Statement

Not applicable.

Data Availability Statement

Not applicable.

Acknowledgments

The authors wish to acknowledge the support of the National Cheng Kung University’s Department of Resources Engineering and the Ministry of Science and Technology, R.O.C.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

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Figure 1. The results of the XRD analysis and the major peaks of NCM powder.
Figure 1. The results of the XRD analysis and the major peaks of NCM powder.
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Figure 2. Effect of (a) amount of H2O2 added, (b) S/L ratio, (c) acid concentration, (d) temperature, and (e) time on leaching efficiency of sulfuric acid.
Figure 2. Effect of (a) amount of H2O2 added, (b) S/L ratio, (c) acid concentration, (d) temperature, and (e) time on leaching efficiency of sulfuric acid.
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Figure 3. Effect of (a) acid concentration, (b) amount of H2O2 added, (c) S/L ratio, (d) temperature, and (e) time on leaching efficiency of hydrochloric acid.
Figure 3. Effect of (a) acid concentration, (b) amount of H2O2 added, (c) S/L ratio, (d) temperature, and (e) time on leaching efficiency of hydrochloric acid.
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Figure 4. Effect of (a) amount of H2O2 added, (b) acid concentration, (c) S/L ratio, (d) time, and (e) temperature on leaching efficiency of nitric acid.
Figure 4. Effect of (a) amount of H2O2 added, (b) acid concentration, (c) S/L ratio, (d) time, and (e) temperature on leaching efficiency of nitric acid.
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Figure 5. Optimal leachate selection.
Figure 5. Optimal leachate selection.
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Table 1. The main metal contents in cathode materials of spent lithium batteries.
Table 1. The main metal contents in cathode materials of spent lithium batteries.
ElementLiCoNiMnFeAl
wt%8.0421.4622.2715.090.1270.122
Table 2. The expenditure of materials, energy types, depreciation items, and waste type in the leaching process at lab scale.
Table 2. The expenditure of materials, energy types, depreciation items, and waste type in the leaching process at lab scale.
MaterialsPriceUnitPriceUnit
H2SO40.043TWD/mL116USD/gal
HCl0.043TWD/mL5.3USD/gal
HNO30.043TWD/mL5.3USD/gal
H2O21.4TWD/mL174.1USD/gal
EnergytypesPriceUnitPriceUnit
Water0.000012TWD/mL1.4USD/m3
Electricity3.79TWD/kWh432,000USD/J
Depreciation itemsPriceUnitPriceUnit
Thermostatic bath with
magnetic stirring
79,000TWD/set2604.2USD/set
Vacuum pump27,920TWD/set920.4USD/set
Waste typePriceUnitPriceUnit
Solid waste0.056TWD/g1.85USD/kg
Table 3. Comparison of sulfuric acid leaching results.
Table 3. Comparison of sulfuric acid leaching results.
NoThis StudyZhang et al. [38]Asadi et al. [39]
Temperature60 °C95 °C60 °C
Acid concentration2 mol L−12 mol L−12 mol L−1
Solid-to-liquid ratio25 g L−1100 g L−130 g L−1
Time15 min240 min80 min
Addition of hydrogen peroxide1.5 vol.%0 vol.%4 vol.%
Li leaching rate96.41%100%98.40%
Co leaching rate82.53%98.13%99.0%
Ni leaching rate89.25%97.27%96.78%
Mn leaching rate99.99%97.37%97.53%
Table 4. Comparison of hydrochloric acid leaching results.
Table 4. Comparison of hydrochloric acid leaching results.
NoThis StudyBarik et al. [40]Wang et al. [41]
Temperature70 °C50 °C80 °C
Acid concentration1 mol L−11.75 mol L−14 mol L−1
Solid-to-liquid ratio20 g L−120 g L−120 g L−1
Time12 min120 min60 min
Addition of hydrogen peroxide1.0 vol.%0 vol.%0 vol.%
Li leaching rate90.72%>99%>99%
Co leaching rate77.66%>99%>99%
Ni leaching rate87.07%->99%
Mn leaching rate98.24%>99%>99%
Table 5. Comparison of nitric acid leaching results.
Table 5. Comparison of nitric acid leaching results.
NoThis StudyLee et al. [42]
MaterialLiNi0.33Co0.33Mn0.33O2LiCoO2
Temperature70 °C75 °C
Acid concentration1.5 mol L−11.0 mol L−1
Solid-to-liquid ratio10 g L−120 g L−1
Time15 min60 min
Addition of hydrogen peroxide0.5 vol.%1.7 vol.%
Li leaching rate90.60%>95%
Co leaching rate82.26%>95%
Ni leaching rate92.08%-
Mn leaching rate95.42%-
Table 6. The leaching rate of each metal under the optimal parameters.
Table 6. The leaching rate of each metal under the optimal parameters.
No.Temp.AcidS/LTimeH2O2LiCoNiMnTotal
Leaching
Efficiency
Unit°Cmol L−1g L−1minvol.%%%%%
H2SO4602.025151.596.4182.5389.2599.9971.01
HCl701.020121.090.7277.6687.0798.2460.26
HNO3701.510150.590.6082.2692.0895.4265.48
Table 7. Sulfuric acid leaching cost.
Table 7. Sulfuric acid leaching cost.
MaterialsCostUnitAmountUnitTotal CostUnit
H2SO40.043TWD/mL44.44mL1.92TWD
H2O21.47TWD/mL6mL8.82TWD
EnergytypesCostUnitAmountUnitTotal costUnit
Electricity3.79TWD/kWh1.28kWh4.8512TWD
Water0.000012TWD/mL355.56mL0.0043TWD
Depreciation itemsPurchase costTWD/setDurable number of yearsYears of useDepreciationUnit
Thermostatic bath79,000TWD/set777090TWD
Vacuum pump27,920TWD/set772506TWD
Waste typeCostUnitAmountUnitTotal costUnit
Solid waste0.056TWD/g7.75g0.43TWD
Total price (Does not include the depreciation)16.03TWD
Total price in USD (TWD 1 = USD 0.033)0.53TWD
Table 8. Hydrochloric acid leaching cost.
Table 8. Hydrochloric acid leaching cost.
MaterialsCostUnitAmountUnitTotal CostUnit
HCl0.043TWD/mL42.6mL1.84TWD
H2O21.47TWD/mL5mL7.35TWD
EnergytypesCostUnitAmountUnitTotal costUnit
Electricity3.79TWD/kWh1.28kWh4.8512TWD
Water0.000012TWD/mL457.4mL0.0055TWD
Depreciation itemsPurchase costTWD/setDurable number of yearsYears of useDepreciationUnit
Thermostatic bath79,000TWD/set777090TWD
Vacuum pump27,920TWD/set772506TWD
WastetypeCostUnitAmountUnitTotal costUnit
Solid waste0.056TWD/g7.14g0.40TWD
Total price (Does not include the depreciation)14.45TWD
Total price in USD (TWD 1 = USD 0.033)0.48USD
Table 9. Nitric acid leaching cost.
Table 9. Nitric acid leaching cost.
MaterialsCostUnitAmountUnitTotal CostUnit
HNO30.043TWD/mL95.1mL4.11TWD
H2O21.47TWD/mL5mL7.35TWD
EnergytypesCostUnitAmountUnitTotal costUnit
Electricity3.79TWD/kWh3.2kWh12.128TWD
Water0.000012TWD/mL904.9mL0.0109TWD
Depreciation itemsPurchase costTWD/setDurable number of yearsYears of useDepreciationUnit
Thermostatic bath79,000TWD/set777090TWD
Vacuum pump27,920TWD/set772506TWD
WastetypeCostUnitAmountUnitTotal costUnit
Solid waste0.056TWD/g8.91g0.50TWD
Total price (Does not include the depreciation)24.10TWD
Total price in USD (TWD 1 = USD 0.033)0.79USD
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Tang, Y.-C.; Wang, J.-Z.; Chou, C.-M.; Shen, Y.-H. Material and Waste Flow Analysis for Environmental and Economic Impact Assessment of Inorganic Acid Leaching Routes for Spent Lithium Batteries’ Cathode Scraps. Batteries 2023, 9, 207. https://doi.org/10.3390/batteries9040207

AMA Style

Tang Y-C, Wang J-Z, Chou C-M, Shen Y-H. Material and Waste Flow Analysis for Environmental and Economic Impact Assessment of Inorganic Acid Leaching Routes for Spent Lithium Batteries’ Cathode Scraps. Batteries. 2023; 9(4):207. https://doi.org/10.3390/batteries9040207

Chicago/Turabian Style

Tang, Yi-Chin, Jian-Zhi Wang, Chih-Ming Chou, and Yun-Hwei Shen. 2023. "Material and Waste Flow Analysis for Environmental and Economic Impact Assessment of Inorganic Acid Leaching Routes for Spent Lithium Batteries’ Cathode Scraps" Batteries 9, no. 4: 207. https://doi.org/10.3390/batteries9040207

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