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Pathway decisions for reuse and recycling of retired lithium-ion batteries considering economic and environmental functions

Ruifei Ma, Shengyu Tao, Xin Sun, Yifang Ren, Chongbo Sun, Guanjun Ji, Jiahe Xu, Xuecen Wang, Xuan Zhang, Qiuwei Wu, Guangmin Zhou

2024Nature Communications185 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Reuse and recycling of retired electric vehicle (EV) batteries offer a sustainable waste management approach but face decision-making challenges. Based on the process-based life cycle assessment method, we present a strategy to optimize pathways of retired battery treatments economically and environmentally. The strategy is applied to various reuse scenarios with capacity configurations, including energy storage systems, communication base stations, and low-speed vehicles. Hydrometallurgical, pyrometallurgical, and direct recycling considering battery residual values are evaluated at the end-of-life stage. For the optimized pathway, lithium iron phosphate (LFP) batteries improve profits by 58% and reduce emissions by 18% compared to hydrometallurgical recycling without reuse. Lithium nickel manganese cobalt oxide (NMC) batteries boost profit by 19% and reduce emissions by 18%. Despite NMC batteries exhibiting higher immediate recycling returns, LFP batteries provide superior long-term benefits through reuse before recycling. Our strategy features an accessible evaluation framework for pinpointing optimal pathways of retired EV batteries. Reuse and recycling of retired electric vehicle batteries offer sustainable waste management but face decision challenges. Ma et al. present a strategy with an accessible economic and environmental evaluation framework for treating these batteries.

Topics & Concepts

ReuseLithium (medication)Environmental scienceComputer scienceWaste managementBusinessMedicineEngineeringInternal medicineExtraction and Separation ProcessesRecycling and Waste Management TechniquesAdvanced Battery Technologies Research
Pathway decisions for reuse and recycling of retired lithium-ion batteries considering economic and environmental functions | Litcius