Bacteria breakthrough points to new path for battery self-recycling
Scientists at Boston College have identified a previously unknown bacterium that thrives by feeding on waste from used batteries, suggesting a potential new path toward self-sustaining recycling systems for critical materials. The discovery could help reduce dependence on energy-intensive manufacturing and mining for essential metals used in electronics and renewable energy technologies.
The bacterium was isolated by a multidisciplinary team investigating microbial metabolism in environments rich in battery discharge products. Their research showed that this organism not only processes the metal ions left in used battery cells, but metabolically, converting them into secondary compounds that can be reused in production.
According to the researchers, such microbial processes could form the basis of a new biorecycling framework that extracts and reuses valuable elements such as lithium, cobalt and nickel while minimizing damage to the environment. The team envisions scalable bioreactors capable of continuously circulating metals through biological recovery systems, reducing waste and energy consumption.
The findings open a new frontier in green chemistry by linking biotechnology with the science of material recovery. The research team noted that this approach could lead to self-sustaining recycling operations where bacteria autonomously regenerate useful metals from used devices, potentially transforming global recycling pipelines.
“Microorganisms have developed capabilities that can directly support industrial sustainability,” said one researcher. “Leveraging these processes could allow us to reshape the entire battery recycling industry.”
Research report:Recycling of cathode materials from Li-ion batteries in iron-fed, low-sulfate cultures of Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans
