The lithium supply issue mainly lies in the inability of current mining methods to access lithium sources of dilute concentrations and complex chemistry. Electrochemical intercalation has emerged as a highly selective method for lithium extraction; however, limited source compositions have been studied, which is insufficient to predict its applicability to the wide range of unconventional water sources (UWS). This work addresses the feasibility and identifies the challenges of Li extraction by electrochemical intercalation from UWS, by answering three questions: 1) Is there enough Li in UWS? 2) How would the solution compositions affect the competition of Li to major ions (Na/Mg/K/Ca)? 3) Does the complex solution composition affect the electrode stability? Using one-dimensional olivine FePO as the model electrode, we show the complicated roles of major ions. Na acts as the competitor ion for host storage sites. The competition from Na grants Mg and Ca being only the spectator ions. However, Mg and Ca can significantly affect the charge transfer of Li and Na, therefore affecting the Li selectivity. We point to improving the selectivity of Li to Na as the key challenge for broadening the minable UWS using the olivine host.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9351491 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2200751119 | DOI Listing |
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