Technology Licensing Opportunity: Room-Temperature Electrochemical Metallization of Rare Earth Elements
Technology Licensing Opportunity: Room-Temperature Electrochemical Metallization of Rare Earth Elements
Active
Contract Opportunity
Department/Ind. Agency
ENERGY, DEPARTMENT OF
Sub-tier
ENERGY, DEPARTMENT OF
Office
BATTELLE ENERGY ALLIANCE–DOE CNTR
General Information
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Contract Opportunity Type: Special Notice (Original)
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Original Published Date: Sep 15, 2025 01:01 pm MDT
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Original Response Date: Oct 15, 2025 12:00 pm MDT
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Inactive Policy: 15 days after response date
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Original Inactive Date:
Oct 30, 2025
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Initiative:
Classification
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Original Set Aside:
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Product Service Code: AG22 - ENERGY R&D SERVICES; ENERGY CONSERVATION; APPLIED RESEARCH
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NAICS Code:
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331492 - Secondary Smelting, Refining, and Alloying of Nonferrous Metal (except Copper and Aluminum)
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Place of Performance:
Idaho Falls
,
ID
83401
USA
Description
Note: This is a technology licensing opportunity. No procurement, grants, or funding opportunities are associated with this notice.
Room-Temperature Electrochemical Metallization of Rare Earth Elements
A low-energy, low-hazard alternative to molten-salt electrolysis for sustainable REE production.
Technology Summary
This invention introduces a method to produce metallic rare earth elements (REEs) through room-temperature electrometallization in anhydrous electrolytes. By leveraging unique ion-pairing interactions, Lewis acid-base chemistry, and interfacial structuring, the system enables efficient REE reduction and stable metal formation without the extreme energy use or toxic byproducts of conventional fused salt electrolysis.
Problem Addressed
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High cost & regulatory barriers: Current molten-salt electrolysis (600–1200 °C) generates toxic HF gas and rare earth fluoride waste, triggering costly EPA and OSHA compliance requirements.
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Environmental impact: Legacy processes produce hazardous waste with long-term contamination risks, leading to industry abandonment in North America.
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Supply chain dependence: Metallic REEs are only produced at scale in China, creating vulnerabilities for U.S. manufacturers and defense applications.
Solution
The invention replaces high-temperature fused salt electrolysis with an ambient-temperature electrochemical process. The approach integrates three synergistic innovations:
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Tuned electrolyte nucleophilicity – enabling more efficient reduction pathways.
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Lewis acid-base coordination control – stabilizing the ligand environment during deposition.
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Interfacial electrochemical structuring – improving reaction kinetics and metal stability.
This combination allows REE electrodeposition at room temperature, reducing both energy demand and hazardous byproduct formation. This invention enables dual functionality, electrodeposition and (in-situ) electrorefining.
Key Advantages
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Lower energy consumption – eliminates the need for 600–1200 °C molten salt processes.
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Reduced environmental liabilities – avoids HF gas emissions and toxic fluoride salt accumulation.
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Safer operations – circumvents EPA and RCRA compliance barriers tied to FSE.
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Domestic supply potential – enables North American REE production for critical industries.
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Scalable platform – adaptable to multiple REEs including neodymium, samarium, dysprosium, and terbium.
Market Applications
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Permanent magnets – essential for EV traction motors, wind turbines, and energy-efficient refrigeration.
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Defense systems – critical components for satellites, communication devices, and advanced weapons.
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Lightweight alloys – enhancing aerospace and automotive materials.
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Electronics – miniaturized devices requiring REE-based components.
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Battery technologies – advanced REE-containing chemistries for high-performance storage.
Attachments/Links
Contact Information
Contracting Office Address
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1955 N Fremont Avenue
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Idaho Falls , ID 83415
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USA
Secondary Point of Contact
History
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Sep 15, 2025 01:01 pm MDTSpecial Notice (Original)
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See also
...produce hazardous waste with long-term contamination risks, leading to industry abandonment in North...
ENERGY, DEPARTMENT OF
Bid Due: 6/15/2026
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