Abstract
© The Author(s) 2014. An investigation was carried out to determine the viability of electrowinning lithium from LiOH in molten chloride, with a view to developing a system for the storage and transportation of hydrogen using LiH as the storage medium. It was predicted from the chemical potential diagram for the Li-O-H system that Li metal cannot be electrowon from a LiOH-containing salt, as any Li generated by electrolysis will readily react with LiOH to form Li2O. Electrolysis in molten LiCl-42 mol% KCl or molten LiCl-17 mol% KCl-26 mol% CsCl was therefore utilized, in which LiOH was fed into an anode compartment separated from the Li metal deposited at the cathode by a porous magnesia diaphragm, thereby preventing the transportation of LiOH into a cathode compartment. Using this arrangement, Li metal was successfully obtained with a cathode current efficiency of 84-86%. The generation of CO2 at the graphite anode was also found to decrease with decreasing electrolysis temperature when using a chloride melt with a lower eutectic temperature.
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CITATION STYLE
Takeda, O., Li, M., Toma, T., Sugiyama, K., Hoshi, M., & Sato, Y. (2014). Electrowinning of Lithium from LiOH in Molten Chloride. Journal of The Electrochemical Society, 161(14), D820–D823. https://doi.org/10.1149/2.0871414jes
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