IFAT Munich 2024

IFAT Munich—The World's Leading Trade Fair for Environmental Technologies boasts a high international presence and an impressive number of exhibitors and visitors. IFAT Munich is known as a industry platform for presentations and innovation in the water, sewage, waste and raw materials sector. All relevant key-players will present their latest products and services on environmental solutions. The technical supporting program is free of charge.

From Scrap to Scale: Automating the Circular Economy for EV Battery Recycling

Dr. Andreas Letsch

Info
As end-of-life EV batteries surge, current manual recycling is unsafe and uneconomical. This proposal outlines a large-scale, automated framework that adapts manufacturing principles to mitigate risks, boost throughput, and ensure the economic viability of a circular economy for batteries.
Reduction of resource consumption
Recycling of substances and materials
VDMA Stage (B4.250)
Lecture
English
Conference

The fast adaption of electric vehicles is a cornerstone of global strategies to meet climate targets. However, the long-term sustainability of electric mobility is contingent upon the establishment of a robust circular economy for batteries. Current European Union regulations underscore this necessity by mandating stringent targets for recycling efficiency and material recovery. A critical inflection point is approaching as first generation of battery electric vehicles (BEVs) nears its end-of-life (EoL), which is projected to increase the volume of batteries requiring recycling by at least an order of magnitude within the next five years.

This imminent influx exposes the limitations of the current recycling infrastructure, which is predominantly composed of small-scale facilities operating under significant economic and operational constraints. The principal challenges are twofold. First, the inherent nature of a battery as an energy storage device introduces substantial safety risks during transport, handling, and disassembly, particularly when the state-of-health is unknown. Research from RWTH Aachen quantifies this issue, indicating that logistics and associated safety protocols for EoL batteries can constitute up to 70% of total recycling costs. Second, the prevalent reliance on manual labor for diagnostics, discharging, and disassembly results in low throughput and high process variability, rendering these operations economically challenging.

In response to these challenges, we developed a conceptual framework for a large-scale, automated battery recycling facility. This framework adapts established principles from high-volume manufacturing environments to the distinct requirements of disassembly and material recovery. The core of the concept is the implementation of a highly automated processing line designed to minimize human intervention in critical stages.

The proposed system addresses the identified challenges by:

  1. Mitigating Safety Risks: Automation inherently reduces operator exposure to thermal runaway events and hazardous materials during diagnosis, discharging and disassembly.
  2. Increasing Process Efficacy: An automated line enables high-throughput processing, which is essential to manage the forthcoming increase in EoL battery volume.
  3. Improving Economic Viability: By increasing throughput and reducing the reliance on manual processes, the model aims to significantly lower the per-unit cost of recycling.

This approach provides a scalable pathway to meet regulatory mandates and addresses the fundamental safety and economic barriers that currently impede the establishment of a sustainable battery recycling ecosystem. By creating a technically and economically viable concept for large-scale operations, this work contributes to the foundational infrastructure required for a true circular economy in the electric mobility sector.

Partner / Organizer
German Engineering Federation (VDMA)
Speakers
Andreas Letsch
Director Factory Automation Battery
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