This article is part of all of our series on electric vehicles, written by Christine Hall --
From Geisler. com.
Happily, the answer is yes. -
Power batteries for electric vehicles (
And hybrid cars)
Can be recycled.
For decades, a handful of electric vehicles on the road have been driven by lead. acid batteries.
The latest models with lighter weight and longer range use lithium-
Like a laptop and a mobile phone.
In both cases, the batteries of electric vehicles can be recycled.
In the case of the elderlyLeading technology-
96% of the material in the battery is acid battery-
Including annoying clues. -is recovered.
In contrast, only 38% of the material in the glass bottle is recycled during the recycling process.
They can also be charged and reused before recycling.
Hybrid cars currently on the road, such as Toyota Prius (pripriprius), use nickel metal hydrogen batteries that can be disassembled and recycled in the same way.
When lithium in the battery pack-ion-
Electric cars are thought to be too shabby to drive, and they still have up to 80% of their power left.
So before they get to the recycling center, these batteries are used to support the grid, especially next to less stable sources of energy such as wind or solar.
The battery can store power and help keep the power flow on a uniform keel, rather than tide and tide as the weather changes. Since lithium-ion battery-
Electric vehicles have just entered the mass market, and the recycling center that can recycle their components is also in its infancy.
A big clue --
Acid battery recycler, set to open the first lithium-
Ion battery recycling plant in the United StatesS.
A company with lithium like Tesla Motors.
A few years ago, electric sports cars on the road had delivered used batteries to Toxco's current recycling facility. When lithium-
The ion batteries enter the recycling plant and there are two ways to crush them.
If they are not charged at all, they are chopped so that metal parts such as copper and steel can be easily sorted.
However, if the battery is still possible to charge, they will be frozen in liquid nitrogen and broken into frozen pieces (cool! ).
The liquid nitrogen is too cold to react to the battery, so crushing is safe.
It may be interesting.
Then the metal is separated and reused.