Open Access Article
Spyridon Koutsoukos
,
Chang Liu,
Krishna V. Kinhal
,
Tongxin Liu,
Francis P. Roche and
Francisco Malaret
*
Nanomox Ltd, 21 Albemarle St., London, UK. E-mail: f.malaret@nanomox.net
First published on 6th October 2025
Black mass, the crushed electroactive residue of the battery recycling process, is a valuable secondary source of critical metals. In this work, we present a two-step process, employing deep eutectic solvents and protic ionic liquids for low-temperature fractionalisation of black mass. This method achieved selective recovery of Zn and Mn, demonstrating a more sustainable and efficient alternative to conventional metal separation techniques.
Sustainability spotlightThe depletion of primary sources for critical materials like zinc and manganese, essential for battery production, underscores the urgent need for the development of efficient and sustainable battery recycling technologies. This work explores the use of protic ionic liquids and deep eutectic solvents in the selective extraction of those metals from the black mass of spent alkaline batteries. By enabling efficient separation and valorisation of critical materials, the process takes us one step closer to reducing environmental impact and supporting resource circularity. This work directly contributes to SDG 12 (Responsible consumption and production) and SDG 9 (Industry, Innovation and Infrastructure). |
The most common methods for metal recovery from BM are pyrometallurgy and hydrometallurgy. In a typical pyrometallurgical process, BM is heated to high temperatures (1500–2500 °C), together with a reducing agent (e.g. CO) which converts metal oxides to their pure metal form, before the molten metals are separated from the floating unmelted components.5,6 The pyrometallurgical approach, although allowing for high recovery rates and purities, suffers from high energy requirements and the emission of significant quantities of CO2 and other hazardous gases (as by-products of the incineration of residual organic compounds/polymeric binders). On the other hand, hydrometallurgical approaches benefit from much lower operational temperatures (typically 50 to 200 °C) and reduced emissions,7 making them more environmentally sustainable alternatives. However, hydrometallurgical processes suffer from a lack of selectivity and a dependence on consecutive solvent extraction steps, adding to both the cost and complexity.8
Ionic liquids and deep eutectic solvents have emerged as promising solvents for the extraction and separation of metals from BM.9 Their negligible volatility, high thermal stability and wide electrochemical windows,10 combined with their ability to dissolve and coordinate metal ions,11 make them excellent candidates for the treatment of polymetallic waste and the valorisation of metals.12 The majority of published work focuses on the use of hydrophobic ionic liquids as solvents for liquid–liquid extraction of acidic BM leachates,13–15 although these systems have been less well explored for the direct leaching of targeted metals from the BM dust.16,17
While progress in this space has been promising, ionic liquids (especially aprotic) are expensive, often the result of energy-intensive, multi-step synthesis procedures, and their use as solvents on an industrial scale typically renders the process economically non-viable.18 Nevertheless, the vast chemical diversity of ionic liquids posits the existence of specific subclasses capable of overcoming these limitations.19 In order for this technology to reach commercialisation, it is crucial to explore ways to reduce ionic liquid-associated costs. Working towards this, we have explored deep eutectic solvents and aqueous protic ionic liquids (Fig. 1) as solvents for the extraction of target metals from BM. Both of these solvent types have significantly reduced production costs compared to aprotic ionic liquids, since their synthesis involves an easily scalable one-step component mixing under heating20 or neutralisation of a Brønsted acid and base accordingly.21
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| Fig. 1 Ionic liquids (top) and deep eutectic solvents (bottom) studied in this work, with their abbreviations. | ||
In this study, we investigated the use of aqueous protic ionic liquids and deep eutectic solvents for the selective extraction of Zn and Mn from BM derived from spent alkaline batteries. Through systematic screening of solvent systems, we identified combinations that enable targeted leaching of Zn under mild conditions. We have created an efficient two-step process which generates two leachates, one rich in Zn (over 85% Zn purity) and one rich in Mn (over 70% Mn purity) and a combined yield of 100% Zn leaching and 79% Mn leaching from the BM.
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| Fig. 2 Mass loss after treatment of BM with DI water, 1 M H2SO4, 1 M NaOH, 30% [Bet][HCl] and 30% [TEA][HSO4] at 2 h, 4 h and 24 h. | ||
Further studies were performed using a 30% w/w triethanolammonium hydrogen sulfate ([TEA][HSO4]) aqueous ionic liquid solution as the extraction solvent. Triethanolammonium was selected as the cation because (a) it is a non-hazardous material and (b) it is known to be a chelating amine, forming coordination complexes with several transition metals,27 so it would be expected to boost the solubility capacity of the solution. Fig. 2 demonstrates that, at 30 °C, the leaching profile of [TEA][HSO4] is, like [Bet][HCl], almost identical to that of H2SO4; at 80 °C however [TEA][HSO4] achieves 94% BM dissolution within 2 h, higher than that of H2SO4 at 24 h. The case of [TEA][HSO4] demonstrates that introducing a chelating amine to the extraction system can significantly accelerate the dissolution rates and reduce the reaction time. This is an important finding particularly if complete dissolution of the solid matrix is required; however as the target of this study was to explore solvents that can selectively dissolve target metals, instead of completely dissolving the sample, this was not explored further.
Subsequent experiments were then designed to compare efficiency against the best extraction parameters of [TEA][HSO4], 80 °C for 2 h. A selection of ionic liquids and deep eutectic solvents with different polarities and acidities were tested, in order to evaluate selective extraction of either Mn or Zn (Fig. 3). 30% tributylammonium p-toluenesulfonate ([TBA][PTSA]) was tested, as previous publications indicated that PTSA-based ionic liquids and deep eutectic solvents are promising for the extraction of Zn from waste matrices;28,29 however, in this study no improved selectivity was observed compared to 30% [Bet][HCl]. 2
:
1 choline chloride
:
lactic acid (2
:
1 ChCl
:
LA) is a widely reported deep eutectic solvent with potential applications in the extraction of metals from several matrices;30,31 its benefits lie in its relatively low viscosity compared to other deep eutectic solvents and the non-hazardous nature of its constituent components. In both 30% [TBA][PTSA] and 2
:
1 ChCl
:
LA, the mass loss during BM treatment was high (∼90%) and, as a consequence, no leaching selectivity was observed. These results demonstrated that when an acid is present in the solvent (HCl, H2SO4, PTSA, LA) selectivity is low, likely because for all the studied solvents, the acids exist either in their neutral form (in [Bet][HCl] and 2
:
1 ChCl
:
LA) or in an equilibrium between the neutral and ionic forms21 (in protic ionic liquids [TEA][HSO4] and [TBA][PTSA]), which makes the acidic hydrogen readily available to react with the metals present in BM and dissolve them without preference. The presence of amines demonstrated a clear impact on BM dissolution, causing a gradual dissolution at lower temperatures (compared to 1 M H2SO4 and HCl which non-selectively dissolve 75–90% of the BM), but their effect was not sufficient to compensate for the acid effect.
:
4
:
1 ethylene glycol
:
urea
:
ammonium chloride (5
:
4
:
1 EtGly
:
Ur
:
NH4Cl). This solvent would be expected to have high selectivity towards Zn, because it is basic in nature and because of the presence of NH4+ ions, which are known to form soluble Zn complexes under basic conditions.32 Indeed, 5
:
4
:
1 EtGly
:
Ur
:
NH4Cl demonstrated ∼32% BM dissolution, leaching 71% of the Zn, but only 5% of the Mn from BM (leachate contains 3.0 ± 0.2 mg mL−1 Zn, 0.27 ± 0.05 mg mL−1 Mn and 0.12 ± 0.02 mg mL−1 Fe). The selectivity of 5
:
4
:
1 EtGly
:
Ur
:
NH4Cl towards Zn was a significant finding, as it can provide a starting point for the design of task-specific ionic liquids and deep eutectic solvents for the targeted leaching and separation of Zn from polymetallic waste.
Two components of this deep eutectic solvent, ethylene glycol and ammonium chloride, are classified as hazardous substances (acute toxicity, level 5, H302).33,34 To engineer a less hazardous extraction solvent, we replaced ethylene glycol with glycerol (classified as non-hazardous),35 creating the 5
:
4
:
1 glycerol
:
urea
:
ammonium chloride (5
:
4
:
1 Gly
:
Ur
:
NH4Cl); this led to a dramatically reduced extraction yield (∼10%) and a loss of Zn selectivity (not shown in Fig. 3, but only Fe was extracted with 5
:
4
:
1 Gly
:
Ur
:
NH4Cl). In order to understand whether this was a result of different chemical interactions, or a mixing/viscosity effect, the viscosity of the two deep eutectic solvents was measured at 80 °C, showing 12 ± 1 mPa*s for 5
:
4
:
1 EtGly
:
Ur
:
NH4Cl and 17.3 ± 0.3 mPa*s for 5
:
4
:
1 Gly
:
Ur
:
NH4Cl. Although the viscosities of the two solvent are different, 5 mPa*s is highly unlikely to be the single cause of such loss in selectivity. This indicated that ethylene glycol was a crucial component for the Zn extraction selectivity and further in-depth exploration is warranted, but this goes beyond the scope of this study.
Combining the findings of this study, we created a two-step process for the selective extraction and separation of Mn and Zn from BM (Fig. 4). This process involves treatment of BM with 5
:
4
:
1 EtGly
:
Ur
:
NH4Cl, followed by treatment with 30% [TEA][HSO4]. This route (Fig. 4) produced two leachates: S1, rich in Zn (3.0 ± 0.2 mg mL−1 Zn, 0.27 ± 0.05 mg mL−1 Mn and 0.12 ± 0.02 mg mL−1 Fe), and S2, rich in Mn (1.2 ± 0.1 mg mL−1 Zn, 4.0 ± 0.3 mg mL−1 Mn and 0.40 ± 0.04 mg mL−1 Fe). Further treatment of S1 and S2 (e.g. via liquid–liquid extraction or via selective precipitation) could be employed for further purification of these leachates; however, this is beyond the scope of this work. This short communication has demonstrated that component selection in ionic liquids and deep eutectic solvents can indeed lead to selective extraction of critical metals from BM. The project will continue in the future with a full, systematic study, including complete process optimisation life cycle assessments of the chemical involved.
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| Fig. 4 Two-step process for the extraction of Zn and Mn from alkaline battery BM. The complete process achieves 100% Zn leaching, 79% Mn leaching and 98% Fe leaching. | ||
:
4
:
1 EtGly
:
Ur
:
NH4Cl, achieved high selectivity and yield in Zn leaching (71% leaching yield on Zn, while only 5% leaching on Mn). These results are very promising and a complete, systematic study of such solvent systems is urgent, particularly in light of the observation that modification of the solvent with components with theoretically similar chemical profiles (e.g. replacing ethylene glycol with glycerol) demonstrated dramatic effects on the extraction efficiencies. Finally, as discussed in the Introduction, the bottleneck in the commercialisation of such technologies is their economic viability, so performing techno-economic analyses to evaluate the viability of such solvent systems is crucial. Finally, emphasis is currently placed on developing more efficient and sustainable processes for the stripping of the metals from the leachates (e.g. liquid–liquid extraction or electrowinning), which will allow for the recycling and reuse of the solvent.
:
4
:
1 EtGly
:
Ur
:
NH4Cl with varying temperatures and extraction times. See DOI: https://doi.org/10.1039/d5su00737b.
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