Revitamize LFP! Ascorbic Acid-Assisted Direct Regeneration of Spent LiFePO4 for Li-ion Batteries

22 November 2024, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

The increasing demand for lithium-ion batteries (LIBs), primarily driven by the expanding electric vehicle market and the growing need for efficient energy storage, presents both significant opportunities and challenges. The efficient and cost-effective regeneration of spent LIBs is crucial to minimizing environmental impact and fostering a true circular economy for battery materials. In this study, we introduce an innovative one-step lithiation process for spent LiFePO4 cathodes, conducted in aqueous solution under ambient conditions. This method utilizes readily available and low-cost reagents, including a lithium source and ascorbic acid (vitamin C) as a green reducing agent, offering a substantial advantage over traditional techniques that require harsh conditions and complex setups. The lithiation reaction proceeds rapidly, producing pure and fully regenerated LFP. This environmentally friendly process has been successfully demonstrated at the scale of 18650 cells with electrodes composed entirely of recycled LFP. These cells exhibit excellent electrochemical performance, even after 1000 cycles at 1C rate, comparable to those made with pristine LFP. By providing a sustainable, cost-effective, and easily scalable solution for LFP cathode regeneration, our approach supports the closure of the materials loop, contributing to the sustainable management of LIBs and advancing the shift toward a circular economy.

Keywords

Lithium-ion batteries
LiFePO4
green chemical lithiation
ascorbic acid
regenerated 18650 cells
circular economy
sustainability

Supplementary materials

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Additional data
Description
- XRD patterns of delithiated FePO4 and relithiated LiFePO4 using sodium ascorbate and lithium acetate dihydrate (LiC2H3O2.2H2O) at room temperature under air - Electrochemical performance in galvanostatic mode of the obtained FP powder after 48h in hydrochloric acid solution vs. Li+/Li0 at 0.1C. -Electrochemical performance during SEI formation shown by: charge/discharge galvanostatic curves for the 1st cycle at 0.05C with the 2nd and 10th cycles at 0.2C, and the reversible capacity recorded for the first 10 cycles, corresponding to P-LFP 18650 cell.
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