Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6609212 | Electrochimica Acta | 2016 | 32 Pages |
Abstract
A novel process has been demonstrated to recycle LiFePO4 from spent lithium-ion batteries. The spent LiFePO4 cathode materials were leached by phosphoric acid (H3PO4) solution and followed by subsequent heat treatment to obtain FePO4·2H2O hierarchical microflowers. Furthermore, new LiFePO4/C sample was prepared via a carbothermal reduction process of calcining the obtained FePO4·2H2O precursor with Li2CO3 and glucose in N2 atmosphere. The re-synthesized LiFePO4/C sample inherits the hierarchical microflower structure of the FePO4·2H2O precursor, with a diameter of 1-2 μm. Electrochemical test indicates that the re-synthesized LiFePO4/C shows excellent electrochemical performance as cathode material for lithium ion batteries. The discharge capacity can reach 159.3 mAh gâ1 at 0.1C rate and 86.3 mAh gâ1 even at 20C rate, respectively. After 500 cycles at 5C, they still can deliver a discharge capacity of 105 mAh gâ1 with a high capacity retention rate of 95.4%. Moreover, the lithium element was also recovered in the form of LiH2PO4 from the filtrate after collecting the FePO4·2H2O precipitate. This work provides a promising route for large scale recovery and reuse of spent LiFePO4 cathode materials of lithium-ion batteries.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemical Engineering
Chemical Engineering (General)
Authors
Doucheng Bian, Yonghui Sun, Sheng Li, Yuan Tian, Zeheng Yang, Xiaoming Fan, Weixin Zhang,