As
electric vehicles and energy storage systems (ESS) become increasingly
widespread, the management and recycling of spent lithium-ion batteries has
emerged as a pressing global issue. Traditional recycling methods, such as
energy-intensive smelting or chemically aggressive wet processes, require
significant energy and pose environmental risks.
A research team led by Dr. Yosep Han at
the Korea Institute of Geoscience and Mineral Resources (KIGAM) has
successfully developed an eco-friendly electrochemical process to upcycle
lithium manganese oxide (LiMn₂O₄, LMO), a common cathode material in spent lithium-ion batteries. This process was directly integrated into a
zinc–manganese redox flow battery (Zn–Mn RFB), a promising next-generation
energy storage system, demonstrating its practical feasibility.
The paper is published in the journal Small.
Unlike conventional recycling that
focuses on metal recovery, this method electrochemically converts LMO into
manganese ions (Mn²⁺), which
are then used as electrolytes for redox flow batteries. The team's innovation
represents a substantial shift toward value-added recycling, moving beyond
simple resource recovery, enabling a circular battery ecosystem.
This approach also allows manganese and
lithium to be selectively separated by simply adjusting the electrolyte's pH,
further facilitating material reuse. The technology enables spent batteries to
serve as a direct source of electrolyte and subsequently be reconverted into
precursor materials for new batteries—laying the groundwork for a sustainable,
closed-loop battery lifecycle.
Traditional recovery processes typically
rely on high-temperature (over 900 °C) smelting or strong-acid-based
hydrometallurgy, which require substantial energy and pose environmental risks. In contrast, the new method developed by KIGAM
eliminates the need for thermal or chemical extremes, significantly reducing
both energy consumption and ecological impact.
Rather than decomposing the LMO
material, the researchers guided it through an electrochemical conversion into
Mn²⁺ ions and integrated it into the battery's
electrolyte. The result: comparable initial performance to commercial MnSO₄-based electrolytes, and over 70% energy efficiency retained after 250 charge/discharge cycles.
Moreover, the team applied a
dual-membrane hybrid redox flow battery architecture to achieve high operating
voltage and extended cycle life—key requirements for the commercialization of
large-scale, long-duration energy storage systems.
"This research overcomes the complexity and environmental drawbacks of existing battery recycling technologies," said Dr. Yosep Han. "We aim to further enhance battery resource circularity and energy storage efficiency, contributing to carbon neutrality and a recycling-oriented society."
Source: Eco-friendly upcycling: Turning spent batteries into high-voltage energy storage systems
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