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Recycling spent zinc ion primary batteries for use in superior rechargeable lithium-ion energy storageopen access

Authors
Manikandan, RamuSivakumar, PeriyasamyVandana, S.Kennedy, L. JohnRodney, John D.Kim, Byung ChulJung, HyunOh, Jae-MinRaj, C. Justin
Issue Date
Jun-2025
Publisher
Royal Society of Chemistry
Keywords
Battery Storage; Capacitor Storage; Carbon Carbon Composites; Lithium-ion Batteries; Electroactive Composites; Electroactive Material; Environmental Issues; Ion Energies; Lithium Ions; Primary Cells; Recycling Process; Spent Primary Batteries; Supercapacitor Electrodes; Zinc Ions; Electrolytes
Citation
Journal of Materials Chemistry A, v.13, no.25, pp 19831 - 19839
Pages
9
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
Journal of Materials Chemistry A
Volume
13
Number
25
Start Page
19831
End Page
19839
URI
https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/58514
DOI
10.1039/d5ta02066b
ISSN
2050-7488
2050-7496
Abstract
Recovering electroactive materials from spent primary batteries and converting them into useful products is a crucial and interesting topic for solving many environmental issues. Therefore, in this present work, we recovered useful electroactive materials from spent zinc-carbon (Zn-C) primary cells and utilized them to develop lithium-ion supercapacitor electrodes. In this typical recycling process, the electroactive composite was recovered using a two-step process combining electrochemical exfoliation and sonochemical technique. The structure, morphology and composition of the electroactive composite were studied in detail to explore its feasible electrode properties. Furthermore, a supercapacitor was designed using the composite; it operated at a wide voltage window of 2.5 V in 1 M LiClO4/acetonitrile electrolyte and showed a maximum specific capacitance of 84 F g-1. Moreover, the supercapacitor exhibited a high specific energy of similar to 18.22 W h kg-1 with a maximum specific power of similar to 6387 W kg-1 and a stability of similar to 73% over 10 000 charge/discharge cycles at 1 A g-1. Besides, the fabricated supercapacitor demonstrated practical application potential and showed that the composite recycled from spent primary cells is viable for developing rechargeable energy storage devices.
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