Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10397/114752
Title: Microwave-assisted methanol–sulfosalicylic acid leaching system for efficient and closed-loop lithium-ion battery cathode recycling
Authors: Hu, W
Hu, K
Zeng, Q
Fang, Z
Wu, Z
Su, J
Ye, X 
Wang, L
Lee, LYS 
Issue Date: 15-Sep-2025
Source: Journal of hazardous materials, 15 Sept 2025, v. 496, 139415
Abstract: Effective recycling of spent lithium-ion batteries (LIBs) is critical to mitigating resource scarcity and environmental degradation amid rising global demand for energy storage. However, LIB recycling faces two persistent challenges: non-recyclable reductants in organic acid systems and inefficiencies in processing mixed cathode powders. Herein, we introduce a closed-loop methanol–sulfosalicylic acid (MeOH–SSA) system for rapid, sustainable metal recovery. Leveraging microwave-assisted leaching, this approach achieves exceptional efficiencies (>99 % within 15 min) for extracting Li, Ni, Co, and Mn, governed by an internal diffusion-controlled mechanism with notably low activation energies (15.39, 17.57, and 17.55 kJ mol−1 for Ni, Co, and Mn, respectively). Our integrated recovery process, encompassing oxalate coprecipitation, MeOH regeneration, and Li3PO4 isolation, achieves complete recovery of Ni and Co, high recovery of Mn (97 %), and effective Li recovery (95.87 % with 94 % purity), alongside 92.53 % MeOH reuse. A techno-economic analysis highlights significant advantages: a net profit of $22.59 per kg of processed cathode material with an energy consumption of 28.09 MJ kg−1, outperforming conventional methods in cost-efficiency and environmental footprint. Notably, this system excels across both single-component and mixed cathode compositions. By simultaneously addressing reductant reusability and mixed-cathode compatibility, this work establishes a versatile, eco-efficient framework for LIB recycling.
Keywords: Lithium-ion battery recycling
Methanol
Microwave-assisted leaching
Mixed cathode recycling
Sulfosalicylic acid
Publisher: Elsevier
Journal: Journal of hazardous materials 
ISSN: 0304-3894
EISSN: 1873-3336
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2025.139415
Appears in Collections:Journal/Magazine Article

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