The electric vehicle revolution has created an urgent need for lithium-ion battery (LIB) recycling, with projections exceeding 11 million tons of end-of-life batteries annually by 2030. However, progress toward a circular economy remains fragmented. This perspective article introduces the concept of a ‘Recycling Trilemma,’ arguing that technological advancements in material separation are systematically undermined by economic volatility and regulatory fragmentation. While current literature focuses on isolated domains—chemistry, business models, or policy—this work provides a systems-level synthesis. By analyzing the friction points between material science (e.g., binder removal, impurity sensitivity), economic realities (e.g., logistics costs, LFP profitability), and regulatory frameworks (e.g., EU vs. US divergence), we propose that true circularity requires synchronized design-for-recycling, market stabilization mechanisms, and harmonized digital product passports. The paper concludes that overcoming the trilemma demands a shift from isolated fixes to integrated, cross-sectoral coordination.
Q. Zhang (Fri,) studied this question.