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REalloys Develops Hydrofluoric-Acid-Free Process for Rare Earth Metal Production

By FisherVista

TL;DR

REalloys' HF-free process gives U.S. defense suppliers a cost and safety advantage over Chinese rare earth processing methods, strengthening domestic supply chains.

REalloys' patent-pending process converts rare earth oxides to fluorides with 0.34% oxygen content without hydrofluoric acid, using independent lab-validated chemistry.

Eliminating hazardous hydrofluoric acid makes rare earth processing safer for workers and communities while enabling cleaner U.S. production of critical defense materials.

REalloys found a way to make rare earth metals for F-35 jets and EVs without one of industry's most dangerous chemicals.

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REalloys Develops Hydrofluoric-Acid-Free Process for Rare Earth Metal Production

REalloys Inc. (NASDAQ: ALOY) announced the successful demonstration of a patent-pending hydrofluoric-acid-free fluorination process for producing metallization-grade rare earth fluorides from rare earth oxides. This innovation expands the company's proprietary rare earth metallization technology platform while supporting the development of a scalable North American rare earth supply chain.

Independent laboratory testing confirmed the HF-free process produced fluoride with a final oxygen content of just 0.34 wt%, attributed primarily to surface-absorbed water. This level is consistent with rare earth fluoride feedstock used in industrial rare earth metal production, where metallization-grade feedstocks typically require oxygen levels below 1 wt%.

The results demonstrate that rare earth fluorides suitable for rare earth metal production can be produced without hydrofluoric acid, one of the most hazardous chemicals traditionally used in rare earth processing. Hydrofluoric acid is widely considered one of the most hazardous and difficult chemicals used in industrial metallurgy and remains a standard reagent in conventional rare earth fluorination processes widely used in China and other rare earth processing centers.

Its extreme toxicity and corrosiveness require specialized containment systems, highly controlled handling procedures, and extensive environmental and regulatory compliance measures. These measures significantly increase operating costs, create substantial safety and environmental risks, and make fluorination using hydrofluoric acid complex and difficult to scale for rare earth processing facilities operating under Western environmental and safety standards.

In addition to improving safety, the company believes that the HF-free process has the potential to reduce operating costs, simplify plant infrastructure, lower environmental and regulatory burdens associated with hydrofluoric acid handling, and support more resilient rare earth processing supply chains. REalloys has filed patent applications covering aspects of the HF-free fluorination chemistry and process design used to produce metallization-grade rare earth fluorides.

Rare earth fluorides are a critical intermediate used in the production of rare earth metals, including dysprosium, terbium, and neodymium, that are essential for high-performance permanent magnets used in F-35 fighter aircraft, missile systems, radar platforms, aerospace systems, electric vehicles, robotics, and advanced computing infrastructure. China currently dominates key midstream rare earth processing steps, including fluorination and metallization required to produce heavy rare earth metals used in high-performance magnets for missile guidance, radar systems, and other defense technologies.

By eliminating the need for hydrofluoric acid in this critical step, REalloys' HF-free fluorination process could help enable scalable rare earth metal production in North America and strengthen domestic supply chains for critical defense materials. The company's Ohio facility serves federal logistics and procurement agencies supporting the Department of Defense, the Department of Energy, and National Aeronautics and Space Administration, in addition to the broader Defense Industrial Base and Organic Industrial Base.

Investors can find additional information about the company through its SEC filings available at https://www.sec.gov. The latest news and updates relating to REalloys are available in the company's newsroom at https://tinyurl.com/aloynewsroom.

Curated from PRISM Mediawire

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