4.7 Article

Efficient degradation of industrial pollutants with sulfur (IV) mediated by LiCoO2 cathode powders of spent lithium ion batteries: A treating waste with waste strategy

Journal

JOURNAL OF HAZARDOUS MATERIALS
Volume 399, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2020.123090

Keywords

Spent lithium-ion batteries; LiCoO2 surface catalysis; Sulfite; Singlet oxygen; DFT calculations

Funding

  1. Shanghai Chenguang Program [15CG60]
  2. Shanghai Sailing Program [15YF1404300, 18YF1429900, 19YF1459900]
  3. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51678353, 21677031]
  4. Basic Research Programs in Shenzhen, China [JCYJ20170818104105891]
  5. Cultivation Discipline Fund of Shanghai Polytechnic University [XXKPY1601]
  6. Central Public-interest Scientific Institution Basal Research Fund, ECSFR, CAFS [2019T13, 2019T14]
  7. Shanghai Teacher Professional Development Project [A11NH190713]
  8. Project of Key Undergraduate Courses (Instrumental Analysis) form Shanghai Municipal Education Committee, Gaoyuan Discipline of Shanghai Environmental Science and Engineering (Resource Recycling Science and Engineering)

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Strategies to maximize the reuse of electronic and industrial wastes have scientific, economic, social and environmental implications. We herein propose a strategy of treating waste with waste using LiCoO2 cathode powders from spent lithium ion batteries to eliminate industrial pollutants led by sulfur (S) (IV) in waste water. By radical scavenging experiments and electron spin resonance (ESR) analysis, we identified singlet O-1(2) as the dominant species while SO4 center dot- and (OH)-O-center dot as the secondary species for decontamination during the oxidization process mediated by LiCoO2 powders. The intrinsic mechanism of S(IV) conversion was revealed to be two-step hydrogen migrations from HSO3- to O-2 occurring on LiCoO2 surface by density functional theory (DFT) cal-culations. The surface of LiCoO2 powders plays a key role in anchoring sulfur species and forming surface complex as an excellent medium, which is found to be stable and reusable by material characterizations and the recycling experiment. Free Co(II) ions in solvents have no catalysis effect on the conversion of pollutants. Our work offers a particularly vivid example for rational reuse of electronic wastes to eliminate industrial pollutants, and may raise economic benefits in environmental practice due to two aims achieved in once action.

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