4.7 Review

Bioprocessing of spent lithium ion batteries for critical metals recovery - A review

Journal

RESOURCES CONSERVATION AND RECYCLING
Volume 165, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.resconrec.2020.105225

Keywords

Biohydrometallurgy; Bioleaching; Biorecovery; Cobalt; EV battery; Lithium ion batteries

Funding

  1. University of Liege (Belgium) under Special Funds for Research, IPD-STEMA Programme

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The increasing demand for metals and the depletion of primary metallic resources pose significant environmental and societal challenges. Waste electrical and electronic equipment (WEEE) is increasing globally, with end-of-life electronic wastes containing valuable metals and harmful substances. Proper management and recycling of spent Li ion batteries is crucial to address environmental complications and promote sustainable resource management. Microbial technologies show promise in removing metal ions from WEEE with less cost and no addition of toxic chemicals, making them environmentally friendly alternatives to conventional methods. Biohydrometallurgy practices for leaching critical metals from waste lithium ion batteries and biotechnological methods for recovering these metals from aqueous streams are important areas of research in this field.
The increasing demand for metals and the concomitant depletion of the primary metallic resources is one of the most important environmental and societal challenges nowadays. Critical metals, rare earth elements, base and precious metals demand is growing day-by-day and driving many metals towards the edge of supply risk. On the other hand, the problems linked to waste generation (especially waste electrical and electronic equipment (WEEE)) are also increasing globally. These end-of-life electronic wastes contain significant concentration of critical raw materials accompanied by harmful substances. Spent Li ion batteries is a kind of WEEE stream, bearing considerable concentrations of valuable metals (like Co, Li, Mn and Ni). If the end-of-life Li ion batteries are not managed properly, there is a high risk that these valuable metals and toxic substances could end into the environment. In order to address the environmental complications, sustainable resource management and boost circular economy, it is important to properly manage and recycle these spent Li ionbatteries. Conventional methods based on high-temperature pyro-metallurgical routes together with hydro-metallurgical processing have been widely studied for the recovery of metals from spent LiBs. However, bio-metallurgical approaches have an edge over their counter parts because of their environmentally friendly nature. Microbe-metal interactions have received special attention both in terms of leaching metals from WEEE and also in recovering metal ions from aqueous streams. Microbial technologies are promising for removing metal ions because of less cost, technical feasibility for large scale applications and no need for addition of toxic chemicals thereby avoiding generation of toxic or hazardous byproducts. In this study, particular emphasis is placed on reviewing the progress made in biohydrometallurgy (i.e. bacterial and fungal leaching practices as one and two-step mode) for the leaching of critical metals from waste lithium ion batteries. Biotechnological methods (e.g. biosorption, bioprecipitation and bioelectrochemical treatment) for the recovery of critical metals from pregnant leachates and aqueous streams are also discussed.

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