Abstract

Molecularly-selective metal separations are key to sustainable recycling of Li-ion battery electrodes. However, metals with close reduction potentials present a fundamental challenge for selective electrodeposition, especially for critical elements such as cobalt and nickel. Here, we demonstrate the synergistic combination of electrolyte control and interfacial design to achieve molecular selectivity for cobalt and nickel during potential-dependent electrodeposition. Concentrated chloride allows for the speciation control via distinct formation of anionic cobalt chloride complex (CoCl42-), while maintaining nickel in the cationic form ([Ni(H2O)5Cl]+). Furthermore, functionalizing electrodes with a positively charged polyelectrolyte (i.e., poly(diallyldimethylammonium) chloride) changes the mobility of CoCl42- by electrostatic stabilization, which tunes cobalt selectivity depending on the polyelectrolyte loading. This strategy is applied for the multicomponent metal recovery from commercially-sourced lithium nickel manganese cobalt oxide electrodes. We report a final purity of 96.4 ± 3.1% and 94.1 ± 2.3% for cobalt and nickel, respectively. Based on a technoeconomic analysis, we identify the limiting costs arising from the background electrolyte, and provide a promising outlook of selective electrodeposition as an efficient separation approach for battery recycling.

Highlights

  • Molecularly-selective metal separations are key to sustainable recycling of Li-ion battery electrodes

  • We report an electrochemical route for the separative recovery of cobalt and nickel in spent nickel manganese cobalt oxide (NMC) cathodes, enabled by electrolyte- and polymer-driven splitting of reduction potentials and sequential electrodepositions, which do not rely on the intensive use of specialized extractants

  • The recovery step can benefit from a preceding leaching step in relation to solution chemistry and speciation control[25]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Molecularly-selective metal separations are key to sustainable recycling of Li-ion battery electrodes. Our findings suggest that metal selectivity depends on electrode potential and polymer loading (Fig. 1), leading to a surface-tunable method for direct separation of cobalt and nickel in aqueous solutions.

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call