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The rapid increase of electronic waste, particularly battery waste, presents significant environmental challenges such as pollutant emissions and resource depletion, emphasizing the need for effective valorization and reuse strategies. This study introduces a novel approach for repurposing end-of-life lithium iron phosphate (LFP) batteries as catalysts in the pyrolysis of walnut shells (WS). Characterization analyses revealed that LFP provides both Lewis and Brønsted acid sites, which alter the thermal decomposition pathway of WS. As a catalyst, LFP enhanced dehydration reactions, leading to increased yields of key platform chemicals including H, furfural, 2-methylfurfural, and levoglucosenone, while simultaneously reducing CO emissions. Additionally, WS effectively captured fluorine species released from the volatilization of polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF) in LFP, thereby suppressing harmful HF formation. The optimal furfural yield was achieved at a 1:2 WS to LFP blending ratio. H production increased with temperature up to 800 ˚C, but higher temperature also accelerated the thermal degradation of valuable chemicals, highlighting the importance of proper temperature control to achieve optimal product yields. Life cycle assessment demonstrated that incorporating LFP into WS pyrolysis substantially reduced a broad range of environmental impacts. These findings support the potential of spent LFP batteries as catalysts for sustainable chemical production and resource recycling, contributing to the development of a circular industrial value chain.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.biortech.2025.133273 | DOI Listing |
Bioresour Technol
September 2025
Department of Earth Resources and Environmental Engineering, Hanyang University, Seoul 04763, Republic of Korea. Electronic address:
The rapid increase of electronic waste, particularly battery waste, presents significant environmental challenges such as pollutant emissions and resource depletion, emphasizing the need for effective valorization and reuse strategies. This study introduces a novel approach for repurposing end-of-life lithium iron phosphate (LFP) batteries as catalysts in the pyrolysis of walnut shells (WS). Characterization analyses revealed that LFP provides both Lewis and Brønsted acid sites, which alter the thermal decomposition pathway of WS.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAdv Mater
September 2025
School of Materials Science and Chemical Engineering, Harbin University of Science and Technology, Harbin, 150080, China.
The polysulfide shuttling and sluggish sulfur redox kinetics hinder the commercialization of lithium-sulfur (Li-S) batteries. Herein, the fabrication of phosphorus (P)-doped iron telluride (FeTe) nanoparticles with engineered Te vacancies anchored on nitrogen (N)-doped carbon (C) (P-FeTe@NC) is presented as a multifunctional sulfur host. Theoretical and experimental analyses show that Te vacancies create electron-deficient Fe sites, which chemically anchor polysulfides through enhanced Fe─S covalent interactions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLangmuir
September 2025
School of Materials Science and Engineering, Changchun University of Science and Technology, Changchun, Jilin 130022, P.R. China.
Amidst global sustainability imperatives, this study pioneers a solid-state regeneration strategy that transforms spent LiCoO (LCO) cathodes into high-performance materials via amorphous lithium iron phosphate glass (LFPg)-driven structural reconfiguration. Unlike conventional recycling that decomposes cathodes, our approach leverages LFPg's defect-rich framework, high ionic conductivity, and dynamic interfacial activity to directly reconstruct degraded LCO crystals. The LFPg acts as a multifunctional repair agent: creating Li diffusion channels through disorder engineering, eliminating oxygen vacancies via atomic oxygen transfer, scavenging impurities (e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAdv Mater
September 2025
Key Laboratory for Liquid-Solid Structural Evolution and Processing of Materials, Ministry of Education, School of Materials Science and Engineering, Shandong University, Jinan, 250061, China.
Conversion-type iron chalcogen cathodes, characterized by the multi-electron redox reaction and cost-effectiveness, represent an alternative pathway for next-generation all-solid-state lithium batteries (ASSLBs). In this study, α-FeSe as a cathode is identified that operates stably through a Fe/Fe redox reaction in a sulfide solid-state system at 30 C, without the need for any carbon additives. This carbon-free α-FeSe cathode exhibits rapid Li/e transfer properties and limited volume change, thus yielding high reversible capacity (564.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMolecules
August 2025
Dipartimento di Energia, Politecnico di Milano, via Lambruschini 4, 20156 Milano, Italy.
Exposure of LIB materials to ambient conditions with some level of humidity, either accidentally owing to imperfect fabrication or cell damage, or deliberately due to battery opening operations for analytical or recycling purposes, is a rather common event. As far as humidity-induced damage is concerned, on the one hand the general chemistry is well known, but on the other hand, concrete structural details of these processes have received limited explicit attention. The present study contributes to this field with an investigation centered on the use of Raman spectroscopy for the assessment of structural modifications using common lithium iron phosphate (LFP) and nickel-cobalt-manganese/lithium-manganese oxide (NCM-LMO) cathodes.
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