Lithium-ion battery recycling: a source of per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) to the environment?
Environmental Science: Processes & Impacts Pub Date: 2023-04-27 DOI: 10.1039/D2EM00511E
Abstract
Recycling of lithium-ion batteries (LIBs) is a rapidly growing industry, which is vital to address the increasing demand for metals, and to achieve a sustainable circular economy. Relatively little information is known about the environmental risks posed by LIB recycling, in particular with regards to the emission of persistent (in)organic fluorinated chemicals. Here we present an overview on the use of fluorinated substances – in particular per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) – in state-of-the-art LIBs, along with recycling conditions which may lead to their formation and/or release to the environment. Both organic and inorganic fluorinated substances are widely reported in LIB components, including the electrodes and binder, electrolyte (and additives), and separator. Among the most common substances are LiPF6 (an electrolyte salt), and the polymeric PFAS polyvinylidene fluoride (used as an electrode binder and a separator). Currently the most common LIB recycling process involves pyrometallurgy, which operates at high temperatures (up to 1600 °C), sufficient for PFAS mineralization. However, hydrometallurgy, an increasingly popular alternative recycling approach, operates under milder temperatures (<600 °C), which could favor incomplete degradation and/or formation and release of persistent fluorinated substances. This is supported by the wide range of fluorinated substances detected in bench-scale LIB recycling experiments. Overall, this review highlights the need to further investigate emissions of fluorinated substances during LIB recycling and suggests that substitution of PFAS-based materials (i.e. during manufacturing), or alternatively post-treatments and/or changes in process conditions may be required to avoid formation and emission of persistent fluorinated substances.
Recommended Literature
- [1] Enabling stable MnO2 matrix for aqueous zinc-ion battery cathodes? Yiding Jiao,Liqun Kang,Jasper Berry-Gair,Kit McColl,Jianwei Li,Haobo Dong,Hao Jiang,Ryan Wang,Furio Corà,Dan J. L. Brett,Ivan P. ParkinJ. Mater. Chem. A, 2020,8, 22075-22082 10.1039/D0TA08638J
- [2] Emulsion technologies for multicellular tumour spheroid radiation assays? Kay S. McMillan,Anthony G. McCluskey,Annette Sorensen,Marie Boyd,Michele ZagnoniAnalyst, 2016,141, 100-110 10.1039/C5AN01382H
- [3] Excitation energies from ground-state density-functionals by means of generator coordinates A. B. F. da Silva,K. CapellePhys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2009,11, 4564-4569 10.1039/B902529D
- [4] Emerging investigator series: first-principles and thermodynamics comparison of compositionally-tuned delafossites: cation release from the (001) surface of complex metal oxides? Joseph W. Bennett,Diamond T. Jones,Blake G. Hudson,Joshua Melendez-Rivera,Robert J. Hamers,Sara E. MasonEnviron. Sci.: Nano, 2020,7, 1642-1651 10.1039/C9EN01304K
- [5] Enabling chloride salts for thermal energy storage: implications of salt purity? J. Matthew Kurley,Phillip W. Halstenberg,Abbey McAlister,Stephen Raiman,Richard T. MayesRSC Adv., 2019,9, 25602-25608 10.1039/C9RA03133B
- [6] Excimer and exciplex formation in a pair of bright phosphorescent isomers constructed from Cu3(pyrazolate)3 and Cu3I3 coordination luminophores? Shun-Ze Zhan,Mian Li,Xiao-Ping Zhou,Dan Li,Seik Weng NgRSC Adv., 2011,1, 1457-1459 10.1039/C1RA00566A
- [7] Evolutionary de novo design of phenothiazine derivatives for dye-sensitized solar cells? Vishwesh Venkatraman,Marco Foscato,Vidar R. Jensen,Bj?rn K?re AlsbergJ. Mater. Chem. A, 2015,3, 9851-9860 10.1039/C5TA00625B
- [8] Dissolved oxygen sensor based on fluorescence quenching of oxygen-sensitive ruthenium complexes immobilized in sol–gel-derived porous silica coatings Analyst, 1996,121, 785-788 10.1039/AN9962100785
- [9] Fast-pulsing NMR techniques for the detection of weak interactions: successful natural abundance probe of hydrogen bonds in peptides? Amandine Altmayer-Henzien,Valérie Declerck,David J. Aitken,Ewen Lescop,Denis Merlet,Jonathan FarjonOrg. Biomol. Chem., 2013,11, 7611-7615 10.1039/C3OB41876F
- [10] Fe3O4/PEG-SO3H as a heterogeneous and magnetically-recyclable nanocatalyst for the oxidation of sulfides to sulfones or sulfoxides Saeideh Mirfakhraei,Malak Hekmati,Fereshteh Hosseini Eshbala,Hojat VeisiNew J. Chem., 2018,42, 1757-1761 10.1039/C7NJ02513K
Journal Name:Environmental Science: Processes & Impacts
research_products
-
CAS no.: 89640-58-4