Batteries are recycled in various ways depending on their chemical composition. That’s why batteries must always be sorted first before they can be recycled. Generally speaking, the battery is first stripped of its outer cover and then goes through a multi-step metallurgic process. The inner parts of the battery are smelted, ground or broken up, and the metals are sorted by type, cleaned and processed.
The Ni-Cd battery recycling process
A huge advantage of Ni-Cd cells is the fact that they can be very efficiently recycled and processed. Nickel-cadmium batteries mainly consist of the positive nickel electrode and the negative cadmium electrode. The rest of the cell is mainly iron, nickel-plated steel, and plastics.
99.995% of the nickel and cadmium in GAZ Ni-Cd batteries is recyclable.
One of the recent innovations in the Nickel-Cadmium recycling process is the use of the vacuum distillation furnace to separate metals with a low evaporation point (e.g., Cadmium) from metals with a high evaporation temperature (e.g., Ni-Fe-steel). Pre-sorted batteries of one specific type are charged to a high temperature resistant batch container, which is loaded to the vacuum furnace. The furnace, consisting of a quartz pipe, is hermetically sealed and evacuated. Through induction, the batteries are heated stepwise. The hot metallic vapor streams through a tube down into a water-cooled metal condenser. There, the Cd-vapor re-condenses into small liquid Cd-drops, generating a metallic plate, remelted into slabs.