The Background
The lithium battery market has rapidly increased over the years, especially for the application of electrical vehicles. Electrical vehicle batteries contain solvents, plastics, and electronic components as well as metals such as cobalt, nickel and lithium. Lithium batteries that are beyond their lifecycle will be packed and shipped to a specialist battery recycling plant. The growing demand has forced companies to priorities battery recycling to recover rare essential metals.
In battery recycling the batteries are first discharged for safety purposes, then the battery is dismantled to gain access to the cells which contain the metals. The cells are then crushed to expose and recover the metals which leaves a black powder known as black mass. For the metals to be recovered, the black mass goes through a process known as hydrometallurgy, this process produces water containing organic solvents and electrolytes. As more battery batches are treated, the organic content levels in the water rise and the organics need to be removed for water reuse.