Business and Technology

Car battery recycling market gears up for future boom

Researcher Anna Vanderbruggen peers into a vat of dark bubbling liquid, the result of a process she has developed to recover graphite from old lithium-ion batteries. Although graphite represents up to a quarter of the weight of the batteries, no one has yet come up with a viable plan to recycle it, according to Vanderbruggen.

The 29-year-old researcher is still fine-tuning her method but has already received an award from the European Institute of Innovation and Technology (EIT) for her efforts.

As Europe shifts gear from fossil fuel vehicles to electrified cars, recycling graphite as well as other elements in batteries is gradually becoming a major focus. All the more so as the continent seeks to wean itself off its reliance on countries like China for raw materials.

“Battery manufacturers were not interested” in recycled graphite up to now because “they could get it at low cost in China”, Vanderbruggen told AFP. Her method, developed at the Helmholtz Research Institute in Freiberg, Germany, involves extracting graphite from “black mass”, a powder that also contains cobalt, nickel, lithium and manganese.

“You put the black mass in water and add some chemicals and air bubbles, like in a jacuzzi,” Vanderbruggen, who is from France, said. The graphite attaches itself to the bubbles, whereas the metals are hydrophilic and therefore remain in the water.”

Vanderbruggen also works as a consultant for businesses exploring the opportunities that recycling electric car batteries could bring in the future. In 10 years’ time, so many batteries will be manufactured that lithium will absolutely have to be recycled, otherwise there won’t be enough,” Barboux said.

In theory, the technology now exists to recycle almost all the materials that make up lithium-ion batteries, according to the experts interviewed by AFP. German group Aurubis, one of Europe’s largest suppliers of non-ferrous metals, claims to be able to recycle at least 95 percent of the metals that make up “black mass” at a pilot plant it has set up in Hamburg.

French mining group Eramet, Belgium’s Umicore and German carmaker Mercedes have also launched similar ventures. The majority of such projects are still in their pilot stages.

“It’s a huge growing market and we want to play a role in it,” said Ken Nagayama, head of business development for battery materials at Aurubis, who is currently working on a graphite recycling process.

He believes there will be “sufficient market supply to develop a battery recycling plant in an industrial scale during the second half of the decade. Increasing raw material costs and shortages have led to a surge of interest in the field.

The price of lithium has increased by 13 percent over the past five years, according to Philippe Barboux, a professor of chemistry at PSL University in Paris. Lithium has not been recycled on a large scale up to now “because it was not profitable”, he said.

Source: eNCA

In other news – AKA’s fanbase demand answer from President Cyril Ramaphosa

AKA’s fan base famously known as The Megacy demand answers from President Cyril Ramaphosa.

AKA’s fanbase

Following over a month of the rapper’s assassination in Durban, there’s yet to be any laudable report from the police despite claiming to have started an investigation with the aid of the released CCTV footage. In an open letter to President Cyril Ramaphosa, superfan Rubu Thulisa wrote. Learn more