Technology Licensing Opportunity: Room-Temperature Electrochemical Metallization of Rare Earth Elements
Energy, Department of · ENERGY, DEPARTMENT OF
This notice is not accepting responses (deadline was Jun 14, 2026, 8:00 PM EDT).
Page kept for research and related open opportunities below. For current work in this category, use the related notices or browse hubs.
- Response deadline
- Jun 14, 2026, 8:00 PM EDT
- Posted
- Apr 19, 2026
- Solicitation
- BA-1456
- Set-aside
- None listed
- NAICS
- Secondary Smelting, Refining, and Alloying of Nonferrous Metal (except Copper and Aluminum)331492
- Place of performance
- Idaho Falls, ID, USA
- Contracting office
- BATTELLE ENERGY ALLIANCE�DOE CNTR · Idaho Falls · ID
- Source
- SAM.gov · updated May 9, 2026
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 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. Environmental impact: Legacy processes produce hazardous waste with long-term contamination risks, leading to industry abandonment in North America. 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: Tuned electrolyte nucleophilicity � enabling more efficient reduction pathways. Lewis acid-base coordination control � stabilizing the ligand environment during deposition. 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 Lower energy consumption � eliminates the need for 600�1200 �C molten salt processes. Reduced environmental liabilities � avoids HF gas emissions and toxic fluoride salt accumulation. Safer operations � circumvents EPA and RCRA compliance barriers tied to FSE. Domestic supply potential � enables North American REE production for critical industries. Scalable platform � adaptable to multiple REEs including neodymium, samarium, dysprosium, and terbium. Market Applications Permanent magnets � essential for EV traction motors, wind turbines, and energy-efficient refrigeration. Defense systems � critical components for satellites, communication devices, and advanced weapons. Lightweight alloys � enhancing aerospace and automotive materials. Electronics � miniaturized devices requiring REE-based components. Battery technologies � advanced REE-containing chemistries for high-performance storage.
What similar awards have paid
Real federal awards already on the books in a similar lane — so you can size the opportunity, not guess. This is public history, not a bid price, cost estimate, or prediction that you will win.
Typical award size
$19,373
Middle of the pack for similar past awards
Most similar awards fall between $5,074 and $39,893
Who has won work like this
Public awardees in this lane — useful for competitor scan or teaming ideas, not a ranked list of “best” firms.
- 1HOMOGENEOUS METALS, INC.1 award$100,505
- 2POWDER ALLOY CORP1 award$42,000
- 3SOPHISTICATED ALLOYS INC1 award$33,570
- 4MEAK SOLUTIONS LLC.1 award$5,175
- 5BHPE LLC1 award$5,040
- 6ACI ALLOYS, INC1 award$4,961
Recent examples
A few of the newest similar awards in our index.
- MEAK SOLUTIONS LLC.Sep 30, 2025Department of Commerce$5,175Source
- BHPE LLCSep 30, 2025Department of Commerce$5,040Source
- ACI ALLOYS, INCSep 29, 2025Department of Commerce$4,961Source
- HOMOGENEOUS METALS, INC.May 21, 2025National Aeronautics and Space Administration$100,505Source
- SOPHISTICATED ALLOYS INCMar 10, 2025National Aeronautics and Space Administration$33,570Source
- POWDER ALLOY CORPFeb 25, 2025National Aeronautics and Space Administration$42,000Source
Drawn from official USAspending contract records in our index. Always confirm requirements on the SAM.gov notice before you bid.
Intelligence only — not legal advice or a guarantee of award. Always verify requirements on the official SAM.gov notice. Past award amounts are public history, not a suggested bid or prediction. Notice ID 4d235861f6db48feb035a4c4c43fa8e5.