Browsing by Author "Yang, Tairan"
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- Electrochemical Flow System for Li-Ion Battery Recycling and Energy StorageYang, Tairan (Virginia Tech, 2021-11-09)The wide applications of energy storage systems in consumer electronics, electric vehicles, and grid storage in the recent decade has created an enormous market globally. The electrochemical flow system has many applications in Li-ion battery recycling and energy storage system design. First, research work on a scalable electrochemical flow system is presented to effectively restore the lithium concentration in end-of-life Li-ion cathode materials. An effective recycling process for end-of-life lithium-ion batteries could relieve the environmental burden and retrieve valuable cathode battery materials. The design is validated in a static configuration with both cathode loose powder and cathode electrode sheet. Materials with comparable electrochemical performance to virgin cathode materials are produced after post heat treatment. Second, research contributions in sulfur-based flow battery systems for long-duration energy storage are presented. Sulfur-based redox flow batteries are promising due to their high theoretical capacity, low cost, and high abundance. The speciation of aqueous sulfur solutions with different nominal concentrations, sulfur concentrations, and pH are studied by Raman spectroscopy. Next, a promising aqueous manganese catholyte to couple with the sulfur anolyte for a full flow battery is investigated. Test protocols and quantification metrics for the catholyte are developed. The stability of the catholyte, including self-discharge rate and precipitation rate, is measured via ex-situ characterizations. The electrochemical performance of the catholyte is investigated and optimized via in-situ experiments. The reaction pathway for the precipitation of catholyte is discussed and several mitigation strategies are proposed. Finally, a semi-solid sodium-sulfur flow battery is developed. The electrochemical performance of the sodium-sulfur battery is studied first in a static configuration at an intermediate temperature (150°C). Then a Na-S semi-solid flow cell is assembled and cycled under the two-aliquots and three-aliquots intermittent flow.
- Parameter optimization and yield prediction of cathode coating separation process for direct recycling of end-of-life lithium-ion batteriesLi, Liurui; Yang, Tairan; Li, Zheng (2021-07-21)Fast adoption of lithium-ion batteries (LIBs) for electric vehicles requires an effective LIB recycling process to recover the valuable battery components and alleviate the concerns over the disposal of hazardous waste. The retrieval efficiency of cathode materials in direct recycling of end-of-life (EOL) lithium-ion batteries is systematically studied using the Taguchi Design of Experiment (DoE) method for the first time. A mathematical regression model is also developed to predict the yield and guide the parameter selection.
- Water-Based Electrode Manufacturing and Direct Recycling of Lithium-Ion Battery Electrodes-A Green and Sustainable Manufacturing SystemLi, Jianlin; Lu, Yingqi; Yang, Tairan; Ge, Dayang; Wood, David L., III; Li, Zheng (2020-05-22)It is critical to develop a low-cost and environmentally friendly system to manufacture and recycle lithium-ion batteries (LIBs) as the demand on LIBs keeps increasing dramatically. Conventional LIB cathodes are manufactured using N-methyl-2-pyrrolidone as the solvent, which is expensive, highly toxic, flammable, and energy intensive to produce and recover. Ideally, a close-loop industrial supply chain should be built, in which the batteries are manufactured, market harvested, and recycled with minimal external toxic solvent through the whole system. This work demonstrates a green and more sustainable manufacturing method for LIBs where no hazardous organic solvent is used during electrode manufacturing and recycling. The electrodes fabricated via water-based processing demonstrate comparable rate performance and cycle life to the ones from conventional solvent-based processing. Utilization of a water-soluble binder enables recovering the cathode compound from spent electrodes using water, which is successfully regenerated to deliver comparable electrochemical performance to the pristine one.