A Comprehensive Guide to Cutters Used in Battery Recycling Crushers

A-Comprehensive-Guide-to-Cutters-Used-in-Battery-Recycling-Crushers

With the rapid development of the new energy industry, the demand for recycling waste batteries (such as lithium-ion batteries and lead-acid batteries) has surged. Shredder cutters are core equipment in the recycling process—they break down battery casings, electrode assemblies, and other components into sortable pieces, and their efficiency and service life directly determine the productivity of recycling lines. Among the core components of shredders, carbide tools have become the first choice for handling the complex working conditions of battery shredding due to their high hardness, wear resistance, and corrosion resistance: compared to ordinary steel blades, they can withstand the impact of battery metal casings, friction from electrode materials, extend service life by 5-10 times, and reduce downtime for tool replacement. This article provides a complete guide to carbide tools for shredders from four dimensions: characteristics of battery shredding conditions, advantages of carbide tools, selection methods, and maintenance tips, helping you improve recycling efficiency and reduce consumable costs.

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1. First, Understand the Working Conditions: Special Requirements for Shredder Cutters in Battery Recycling

The working conditions of battery recycling shredding are far more complex than those for ordinary materials (such as plastic or wood). These unique characteristics directly require tools to have "wear resistance, impact resistance, and corrosion resistance"—exactly where carbide excels.

1.1 Complexity of Shredded Materials: Mixed Materials, Coexisting Wear and Impact

Waste batteries have diverse structures, and during shredding, tools must handle materials of varying hardness and forms, posing multiple challenges to tool performance:

  • Lithium-ion batteries: Include aluminum alloy/stainless steel casings (hardness HB 80-150), copper/aluminum electrode foils (thin and tough), and cathode materials (hard particles containing cobalt/nickel). During shredding, casings cause impact, electrode foils tend to wrap around tools, and cathode particles continuously abrade the cutting edge.
  • Lead-acid batteries: Include lead alloy plates (hardness HB 50-80, but dense and impactful), plastic casings, and residual sulfuric acid electrolyte. Impact from lead plates can easily chip tool edges, and residual electrolyte may corrode tools.
  • Mixed shredding scenarios: Some recycling lines process multiple battery types simultaneously. Tools must withstand "hard impact (metal casings) + high friction (electrode particles) + mild corrosion (electrolyte)"—ordinary steel blades (e.g., Cr12MoV) often wear out or chip within 1-2 weeks.

1.2 Requirements for Shredding Efficiency: Tools Must Balance "Sharpness" and "Durability"

Battery recycling lines typically require continuous operation (10-12 hours daily) with shredding capacities of 500-1000kg per hour, placing dual demands on tool design and material:

  • Cutting edges must be sharp enough to quickly cut through battery casings and electrode foils, preventing material blockages.
  • Tool bodies must be wear-resistant enough to withstand long-term high-frequency friction, reducing mid-operation replacements (each replacement requires 1-2 hours of downtime, directly affecting productivity).

2. Core Advantages: Why Carbide Tools Are Essential for Battery Recycling Shredders?

In battery shredding scenarios, carbide tools offer "comprehensive and irreplaceable" advantages over ordinary steel blades and ceramic blades, as shown in the table below:

Tool TypeHardness (HRA)Wear Resistance (Relative Value)Impact Toughness (J/cm²)Resistance to Electrolyte CorrosionService Life in Battery Shredding (Reference)Application Limitations
Carbide tools (WC-Co)88-92100 (baseline)25-35Good (cobalt-based)/Excellent (nickel-based)200-500 hoursNo significant limitations; suitable for all battery types
Ordinary steel blades (Cr12MoV)60-6510-1540-50Poor (easily corroded by electrolyte)20-50 hoursOnly suitable for low-load plastic casing shredding; cannot handle metal electrodes
Ceramic blades (alumina)85-8860-705-8Excellent80-120 hoursHigh brittleness; easily chipped by lead-acid battery plate impact

Data shows that carbide tools achieve the best balance of "wear resistance-impact toughness-corrosion resistance": they are over 10 times more wear-resistant than steel blades and more impact-resistant than ceramic blades, perfectly adapting to complex battery shredding conditions. For example, after switching to WC-Co carbide tools, a lithium-ion battery recycling line extended tool life from 30 hours to 300 hours, reduced downtime from 8 times/month to 1 time/month, and increased recycling capacity by 20%.

3. Carbide Tool Selection: 3 Key Dimensions to Match Different Battery Types

Not all carbide tools are suitable for battery shredding. Selection must be precise based on the type of battery (lithium-ion/lead-acid), desired shred size, and three dimensions: "grade, structure, and edge design."

1. Step 1: Choose Carbide Grade by Battery Type—Core Is Balancing "Wear Resistance" and "Toughness"

Different batteries require different carbide grades with varying cobalt content (affecting toughness) and grain size (affecting hardness):

Battery Type to ShredCore RequirementsRecommended Carbide GradeGrade CharacteristicsExpected Service Life (Continuous Shredding)
Lithium-ion batteriesResistance to electrode particle friction (wear resistance first), withstanding casing impactYG6, YG8 (fine-grained)6%-8% cobalt content; hardness HRA 89-91; high wear resistance, moderate toughness300-500 hours
Lead-acid batteriesResistance to lead plate impact (toughness first), electrolyte corrosion resistanceYG12, WC-Ni (medium-grained)12% cobalt content (or nickel binder); impact toughness ≥30J/cm²; improved corrosion resistance200-400 hours
Mixed batteriesBalanced wear resistance, impact resistance, and corrosion resistanceYG10X (ultra-fine-grained)10% cobalt content; ultra-fine grains enhance hardness and toughness; suitable for multi-material shredding250-450 hours

Selection Example: A recycling line specializing in ternary lithium batteries, with cathode materials containing large amounts of hard cobalt lithium oxide particles, uses YG6 fine-grained carbide tools. The cutting edge wears slowly and remains sharp after 400 hours of continuous shredding, requiring no replacement. Choosing YG12 (higher toughness but slightly lower wear resistance) would reduce service life to around 250 hours.

2. Step 2: Choose Tool Structure by Shred Size—Affects Efficiency and Material Adaptability

Different shred size requirements (e.g., fine shredding below 5mm, coarse shredding above 20mm) require matching carbide tools with different structures. Common structures and their suitable scenarios are as follows:

Tool Structure TypeStructural CharacteristicsSuitable Shred SizeAdvantagesSuitable Battery Types
Toothed blades锯齿状边缘(齿距5-10mm),刃口锋利10-30mm (coarse shredding)Easy to cut into battery casings; reduces material wrappingCoarse shredding of lithium-ion/lead-acid batteries (separating casings from internal components)
Flat-edge bladesStraight cutting edge (edge thickness 1-2mm)5-15mm (medium-fine shredding)Smooth cutting; reduces over-shreddingMedium-fine shredding of lithium-ion electrode assemblies (facilitating subsequent metal sorting)
Combined cutterheadAlternating toothed and flat-edge carbide blades on the cutterhead5-30mm (adjustable)Handles both coarse and medium shredding; no need to replace toolsMixed battery recycling lines (requiring flexible size adjustment)

3. Step 3: Pay Attention to Tool Installation and Fixing—Avoid Premature Wear from Improper Installation

Even with the right grade and structure, improper installation can cause uneven tool stress and premature wear. Common reasonable installation designs include:

  • Bolt fixing + positioning pins: Ensure coaxiality between the blade and cutterhead (deviation ≤0.1mm) using positioning pins, preventing blade wobble during rotation and localized wear.
  • Welding + reinforced backplate: For large cutterheads (diameter ≥500mm), carbide blades are fixed with silver-copper brazing, and a steel backplate is added to enhance support, reducing blade deformation under impact.
  • Quick-change structure: For high-wear edge areas, design "detachable blades"—only the blade itself needs replacement after wear, not the entire cutterhead, reducing consumable costs.

4. Use and Maintenance of Carbide Tools: 3 Tips to Extend Life and Reduce Costs

While carbide tools are durable, proper use and maintenance can extend their life by up to 30%, avoiding "abnormal wear" from improper operation.

1. Before Startup: Inspect and Adjust to Avoid "Faulty Operation"

  • Check tool installation: Ensure bolts are tight, positioning pins are not misaligned, and blade edges are free of chips (small chips should be repaired with a diamond grinding wheel first to prevent wear expansion).
  • Adjust shredding gap: Set a reasonable gap between moving and fixed blades based on battery type (0.5-1mm for lithium-ion batteries, 1-1.5mm for lead-acid batteries). Too small a gap increases friction; too large a gap causes incomplete shredding and blockages.
  • Clean material channels: Ensure no residual materials (e.g., metal blocks from previous shredding) in the shredding chamber to avoid sudden impact on tools during startup.

2. During Operation: Control Parameters to Avoid Overloading

  • Stabilize feeding speed: Feed at the tool’s rated capacity (e.g., 500kg/hour) to avoid sudden overloads (overloading concentrates stress on edges, accelerating wear or chipping).
  • Monitor tool temperature: Friction during battery shredding generates heat. If tool temperature exceeds 200°C (detectable with an infrared thermometer), pause feeding or reduce speed to prevent carbide softening (cobalt-based carbide softens above 800°C, but long-term exposure to temperatures above 200°C accelerates edge oxidation).
  • Clear缠绕物 promptly: Lithium-ion battery electrode foils tend to wrap around tools. Stop and clear wraps immediately to avoid edge deformation from挤压.

3. After Wear: Repair Correctly Instead of Replacing Directly

Worn carbide tools do not need immediate replacement—professional repair allows 2-3 reuses:

  • Edge grinding: When edge wear ≤0.5mm, grind the edge with a diamond砂轮 (grain size 120-200 mesh) to restore sharpness (control feed rate ≤0.02mm/pass to avoid edge cracking from overheating).
  • Welding repair: For small chips (depth ≤1mm), use carbide welding technology (e.g., laser cladding) to fill gaps, then grind to shape. Repair cost is only 1/3 of a new tool.
  • Replacement criteria: Replace tools when blade thickness is worn by over 30% of the original (e.g., from 5mm to below 3.5mm) or when large-area chipping occurs to avoid reducing shredding efficiency.

5. Clarifying Common Misconceptions: 3 Wrong Views About Carbide Tools

Misconception 1: "The harder the carbide tool, the better—choosing the highest hardness grade is always correct."

Fact: Hardness and toughness are "trade-offs"—higher hardness means lower toughness. For example, when shredding lead-acid batteries, choosing YG3 (3% cobalt content) with extremely high hardness but low toughness results in frequent edge chipping from lead plate impact, leading to shorter life than YG12 (moderate toughness). The correct approach is to balance hardness and toughness based on battery type, not pursue single high hardness.

Misconception 2: "Tools only need to be fixed securely; gap size doesn’t matter."

Fact: Excessively large or small gaps shorten tool life—too small a gap causes "dry friction" between moving and fixed blades, accelerating edge wear by 30%; too large a gap causes materials to repeatedly impact tools, leading to uneven stress and "overload wear." For example, a recycling line with a gap set to 2mm (vs. the recommended 0.5-1mm for lithium-ion batteries) reduced tool life from 350 hours to 200 hours.

Misconception 3: "Worn carbide tools can only be scrapped—repair is not cost-effective."

Fact: Reasonable repair costs far less than replacement—for YG8 tools, a new blade costs ~¥200, while repair (grinding + welding) costs only ¥50, with 70%-80% of the new tool’s life. A medium-sized recycling plant reduced monthly tool procurement costs from ¥10,000 to ¥4,000 through repairs, saving ¥72,000 annually.

Conclusion: Carbide Tools Are the "Efficiency Core" of Battery Recycling Shredders

In battery recycling shredding, carbide tools are not "ordinary consumables" but key components determining recycling line capacity and costs. Selecting the right grade and structure, and maintaining them properly, maximizes tool life and reduces downtime losses. For professionals in the tungsten carbide industry, tool recommendations should be based on understanding the customer’s "battery type (lithium-ion/lead-acid), shred size, and daily capacity" to match the appropriate carbide solution, rather than simply promoting high-margin products.

If your recycling line faces issues like "short tool life, low shredding efficiency, or frequent replacements," or needs customized carbide tools for specific batteries, feel free to communicate. We can provide tool sample testing and selection advice based on your equipment parameters and working conditions.

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Kedel Tools is deeply involved in the oil and gas, mining, metal processing, packaging machinery and new energy industries, manufacturing, producing, and selling various types of tungsten carbide tools. Mainly including cemented carbide wear-resistant parts, mining rock drilling tools, tungsten carbideindustrial knives blades, CNC cutting inserts, tungsten carbide end mills, etc.

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