Biotechnology is increasingly being explored in battery production and battery recycling, mainly to make processes cleaner, cheaper, and less dependent on harsh chemicals or high-energy methods. It’s not yet the dominant approach in mainstream lithium-ion battery manufacturing, but it is becoming important in specific stages.
Here’s how it’s used:
1. Bioleaching (microbes to extract metals)
One of the most established uses.
Certain bacteria and fungi can “eat away” at rocks or battery waste to release valuable metals like:
- Lithium
- Cobalt
- Nickel
- Manganese
Common microbes include Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans and similar acid-producing bacteria.
How it works:
- Microbes produce acids or oxidising agents
- These dissolve metal compounds
- Metals are then collected from the solution
Why it matters:
- Replaces high-energy mining and smelting
- Reduces toxic chemical use
- Especially useful in battery recycling (urban mining)
2. Bio-recycling of used batteries
Instead of shredding batteries and using strong acids, biotech methods can:
- Selectively leach metals using microbial cultures
- Recover higher purity metals with fewer contaminants
This is especially promising for:
- Electric vehicle batteries
- Electronic waste streams
3. Bio-derived materials for electrodes (emerging research)
Researchers are experimenting with biological materials as battery components:
Examples:
- Bacterial cellulose → flexible, high-strength separator materials
- Chitin (from shells) → carbon sources for electrodes
- Algae-derived carbon → sustainable electrode materials
Benefit: reduces reliance on petroleum-based plastics and synthetic carbon.
4. Microbial fuel cells (biological batteries)
This is a different concept: using living microbes to generate electricity.
- Bacteria break down organic matter (like wastewater)
- In doing so, they release electrons
- These electrons are captured as electrical current
Uses today:
- Low-power sensors
- Wastewater treatment systems
- Remote environmental monitoring
Not yet suitable for phones or EVs, but useful in niche applications.
5. Bio-assisted manufacturing (experimental)
Some research explores using biological systems to:
- Grow nanostructured battery materials
- Control crystal formation at low temperatures
- Reduce energy use in production of cathode/anode materials
Bottom line
Biotechnology in batteries is mostly used for:
- Recycling metals using bacteria (most practical today)
- Developing bio-based battery materials (emerging)
- Creating microbial systems for niche power generation
It’s not replacing lithium-ion batteries yet, but it’s becoming important in making the battery supply chain more sustainable—especially for recycling critical metals.


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