NTU, Singapore is recycling a mixture of different Li-ion battery cells including those of LFP, NMC and LCU chemistries.
Acidic medium for battery disintegration achieved through citrus orange peels that get leftover as food waste.
NTU's research has been able to extract up to 95% of a Li-ion battery's critical elements such as lithium, nickel, cobalt and manganese.
Professor Madhavi Srinivasan, an IIT-Madras alumna, has been leading the e-waste recycling project at the Sustainability Office at NTU, Singapore.
Professor Madhavi Srinivasan: 'The Urban Mining concept is very interesting and has potential of making countries self-reliant for critical Li-ion battery elements in future.'
Professor Madhavi Srinivasan: "Lithium-ion battery recycling is going to become extremely important five years down the line."
NTU Singapore recycles Li-ion battery using orange fruit peel

The eco-friendly recycling process requires significantly less heat and investment compared to conventional Pyrometallurgy and Hydrometallurgy processes.

09 Sep 2022 | 2368 Views | By Mayank Dhingra

The Sustainability Office at the Nanyang Technological University (NTU), Singapore has developed a new methodology to recycle and extract up to 95 percent of a lithium-ion battery's critical elements, by using an eco-friendly, low-heat process that relies on food waste.

The process which utilises fruit peels of leftover oranges to ...

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