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Inicio  /  Clean Technologies  /  Vol: 5 Par: 3 (2023)  /  Artículo
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Toward Efficient Recycling of Vanadium Phosphate-Based Sodium-Ion Batteries: A Review

Aleksandr Sh. Samarin    
Alexey V. Ivanov and Stanislav S. Fedotov    

Resumen

Sodium-ion batteries (SIBs) have demonstrated noticeable development since the 2010s, being complementary to the lithium-ion technology in predominantly large-scale application niches. The projected SIB market growth will inevitably lead to the generation of tons of spent cells, posing a notorious issue for proper battery lifecycle management, which requires both the establishment of a regulatory framework and development of technologies for recovery of valuable elements from battery waste. While lithium-ion batteries are mainly based on layered oxides and lithium iron phosphate chemistries, the variety of sodium-ion batteries is much more diverse, extended by a number of other polyanionic families (crystal types), such as NASICON (Na3V2(PO4)3), Na3V2(PO4)2F3-yOy, (0 = y = 2), KTiOPO4-type AVPO4X (A?alkali metal cation, X = O, F) and ß-NaVP2O7, with all of them relying on vanadium and phosphorous?critical elements in a myriad of industrial processes and technologies. Overall, the greater chemical complexity of these vanadium-containing phosphate materials highlights the need for designing specific recycling approaches based on distinctive features of vanadium and phosphorus solution chemistry, fine-tuned for the particular electrodes used. In this paper, an overview of recycling methods is presented with a focus on emerging chemistries for SIBs.