Dragonfly making cells with lithium hydroxide from recycled batteries

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From pv magazine USA

Dragonfly Energy has manufactured a lithium-based battery cell using high-purity lithium hydroxide that was recovered from recycled batteries. The proof of concept could help to build a more sustainable, circular battery manufacturing industry, it said.

The lithium hydroxide was recovered by Aqua Metals, which is working on recycling solutions for materials used in energy storage and electric vehicle supply chains. The two companies are working on creating a closed lithium loop – where lithium batteries are sourced, manufactured and recycled – all in Nevada.

Using recycled lithium addresses two major initiatives for Dragonfly Energy, said CEO Denis Phares.

“It helps close the loop by filling in that all-important recycling component, and it provides a ready and sustainable supply of lithium for use in upcoming cell production,” he explained.

The Reno, Nevada-based Aqua Metals pulled the lithium hydroxide from “black mass” – a term that refers to a mixture of crushed and shredded battery cells that have already been used, which contains lithium and one valuable raw materials. Dragonfly Energy used this lithium hydroxide to produce a battery cell with a patented dry powder coating process.

The companies are eyeing the potential of building a closed lithium loop in Nevada, a state they believe is well-positioned to be “the starting and ending point for lithium batteries.” Nevada is believed to have the largest source of lithium in North America, according to the companies, and is also an expanding market for electric vehicles and energy storage technology applications.

Recycling is essential to creating a robust and sustainable energy storage industry in the U.S. and ensuring the country remains globally competitive in the clean energy sector, Aqua Metals’ Cotton told pv magazine USA.

“Recycling lithium ion batteries is the most immediate route to developing domestic supplies of critical minerals like lithium, cobalt and nickel, which are facing increasing supply shortages as the world ramps up clean energy manufacturing,” said Cotton.

The biggest challenge to closing the lithium loop in Nevada as well as other parts of the country will be timing, Cotton said. It is expected that the United States will have nearly a terawatt-hour of lithium battery manufacturing operational by 2030, enough for 12 million to 13 million electric vehicles a year, he said.

“What we won’t have by then is the mines, mineral processing, and refinement capacity to satisfy the raw resource demand,” Cotton said.

Mines can take seven to 10 years to come online and begin producing battery-grade materials, while recycling facilities – which can be operationalized in six months – are constrained by the availability of recyclable materials, he added.

“Making the timing work out for resource demand, manufacturing, and our decarbonization ambitions will be a significant challenge as we create the closed loop systems necessary for a robust electrified economy,” said Cotton.

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