Circular economy
Electromobility: A second life for electric motors
More and more electric cars are being sold, and the number of electric motors produced is increasing accordingly. At the end of their useful life, these are shredded and then recycled. Individual components and assemblies can no longer be reused. Sustainable value retention strategies to refurbish and recycle electric motors in line with a modern circular economy are still lacking.
In the Reassert project, researchers at the Fraunhofer Institute for Manufacturing Engineering and Automation IPA are working with industrial partners to pursue various approaches that include the repair, refurbishment and reuse of the electric motor as well as new designs for the circular economy.
The electrification of the drivetrain is progressing steadily. The electric motors used contain valuable raw materials such as copper, but also rare earth metals such as neodymium, for which China has a virtual monopoly and which cannot be recovered using current recycling methods. In addition, the raw materials used are associated with a poorCO2 balance compared to combustion engines. This makes it all the more important to extend the service life of the engines. "Innovative value retention strategies offer great potential for reducing emissions in terms of sustainability," says Julian Große Erdmann, a scientist at the Fraunhofer Institute for Manufacturing Engineering and Automation IPA in Bayreuth. In the Reassert project, the researchers are working with Schaeffler (consortium leader), the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology KIT, Bright Testing, iFAKT and Riebesam to develop innovative methods for reconditioning electric motors and reusing them in vehicles. They are focusing on the value retention strategies of reuse, repair, remanufacturing and material recycling. These are key elements for a circular economy that makes it possible to reduce the consumption of natural resources and minimize the amount of waste. The project is funded by the Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Climate Protection.
Reduction of environmental impact
Raw material recycling is currently the established value retention strategy. Manual or automated recycling is used to recover copper and aluminum in particular. To do this, the electric traction motors are removed, shredded, sorted into the individual material fractions and melted down. However, the material recycled in this way, which is contaminated, can no longer be used in motors and individual components and assemblies are destroyed. Raw material recycling should therefore only be chosen as the last option for recycling and replaced by the high-quality value retention strategies of reuse, repair, remanufacturing and mechanical recycling. "We want to design a closed-loop system in which valuable resources are reused in order to become less dependent on raw material imports and minimize the extraction of raw materials," explains Große Erdmann. By reuse, the project partners mean the reuse of the complete engine in a second use, while repair means the replacement of defective components and assemblies. In remanufacturing, all components are removed, cleaned, refurbished and reused. "With these strategies, you need fewer raw materials such as rare earths, copper, etc. At best, you still need them for spare parts," explains the researcher. With material recycling, the project partners are planning to dismantle the engine according to type before shredding. The project partners are using reference engines for the passenger car sector to analyze which value retention strategies should be used in each case.
Setting up a process chain from incoming to end-of-line testing
A complete process chain is being created as part of the project, with each station having its own demonstrator or test stand - from the incoming inspection for the classification of the motor to disassembly, demagnetization, cleaning, diagnosis of the components, reconditioning through to reassembly and end-of-line testing, where the functionality of the motor is examined. "For example, during this process, a motor housing with minor signs of wear would be classified for reuse and, if necessary, refurbished using machining processes to ensure functionality. Depending on the chosen value retention strategy, different process steps and process chains are required, so the refurbishment effort can vary," explains the engineer. One challenge, for example, is dismantling and reusing the magnetic materials used in the motors. "A rotor with permanent magnets is difficult to dismantle into its components using mechanical methods, even in the manual dismantling process, due to the coating of the magnets and their adhesion. The aim here is to establish low-destructive disassembly methods."
AI decision tool supports the choice of value retention strategy
An AI decision tool developed in the project, which has access to the product and process data of an electric motor stored in a digital twin, also helps to select the best value retention strategy in each case.
The knowledge gathered in the project will be used to design new electric motors. The aim is to develop a prototype motor for the circular economy that can be easily dismantled and to which the four aforementioned value retention strategies can be easily applied.








