Closed-Loop Recycling of Nickel, Cobalt and Rareearth Metals from Spent Nickel-Metal Hydridebatteries

- Organization:
- International Mineral Processing Congress
- Pages:
- 10
- File Size:
- 323 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2003
Abstract
"Nickel-metal hydride batteries (Ni-MH) are storers of electrochemical energy, which have a higher specific storage capacity than lead or nickel-cadmium batteries. The demand for Nickel-metal hydride batteries is increasing rapidly since their market launch in the early 1990’s. Today there is no suitable and sustainable recycling process to recover nickel, cobalt and rare-earth metals. The discarded batteries are used today in the steel industry as alloy material because they contain nickel. Cobalt and rare-earth metals (RE) are lost; they are non-recycleable.In a German governmental funded research project, IME Aachen, ACCUREC Mühlheim and UVR-FIA Freiberg are cooperating in processing as well as in creating a feasibility study. The target of this project is the development of a new recycling process for metal recovery from Ni-MH-batteries. The proposed process described in this paper consists of a combination of mechanical, pyrometallurgical and hydrometallurgical processing steps. This process is capable of treating all types of Ni-MH-batteries. After comminution steel and organics are separated. The separated Ni-MH is smelted in an electric arc furnace. The products are a nickel-cobalt alloy and a slag phase enriched with rare-earth oxides for further treatment to ‘mischmetal’. Both the Nickel-Cobalt alloy and the ‘mischmetal’ will be directly used in battery production."
Citation
APA:
(2003) Closed-Loop Recycling of Nickel, Cobalt and Rareearth Metals from Spent Nickel-Metal HydridebatteriesMLA: Closed-Loop Recycling of Nickel, Cobalt and Rareearth Metals from Spent Nickel-Metal Hydridebatteries. International Mineral Processing Congress, 2003.