Highlights
- Korean researchers identify a stable operating window for Vietnam bastnaesite ore: near-neutral pH (7–8) and moderate hydroxamic-acid dosage achieve a 49.7% TREO concentrate at 87.8% recovery—showing balance beats extremes.
- A Box-Behnken experimental design reveals that excessive reagent loading reduces selectivity by capturing unwanted gangue minerals, undermining both grade and economic viability in real-world conditions.
- The study underscores a critical industry shift: metallurgical precision and reproducible process control, not maximum chemical dosing, determine whether rare earth deposits become viable supply or remain stranded assets.
A new study (opens in a new tab) clarifies a critical but often overlooked truth in rare earth processing: success is not about finding a single “perfect” lab condition, but about identifying a stable operating range that works under real-world variability. In work led by Junhyun Choi, (opens in a new tab) Korea Institute of Geoscience and Mineral Resources (opens in a new tab), (KIGAM), and University of Science & Technology (opens in a new tab), alongside Gilsang Hong and Wantae Kim (KIGAM), researchers demonstrate that a complex bastnaesite ore from Vietnam’s Dong Pao deposit can be efficiently upgraded within a defined “operational selectivity window.” Published in Scientific Reports (April 2026, Article in Press), the study shows that near-neutral pH (7–8) and moderate hydroxamic-acid collector dosage—not aggressive chemical loading—deliver strong performance, producing a 49.7% TREO concentrate at 87.8% recovery.
Why the Methods Matter
Rather than testing variables in isolation, the team applied a Box–Behnken design—a structured experimental approach—to evaluate how pH, reagent dosage, and temperature interact. This matters because rare earth ores are inherently complex. Valuable minerals like bastnaesite are intergrown with “gangue” minerals such as fluorite, barite, and quartz. In practice, processing is not about floating one mineral cleanly, but managing competing interactions across the entire system.
Key Finding: Balance Over Extremes
The study’s central insight is straightforward but commercially important: more chemicals do not equal better results. Moderate reagent levels at neutral pH improved both grade and recovery, while higher dosages reduced selectivity by pulling unwanted material into the concentrate. This reinforces a broader industry reality—process control and reproducibility, not brute-force chemistry, determine economic viability.
Limitations and What Comes Next
This remains a controlled laboratory study on a single ore body and is still undergoing final publication edits. It does not address full-scale economics, downstream separation, or performance under fluctuating feed conditions. The next step is pilot-scale validation and integration into full processing circuits.
Bottom Line
For Rare Earth Exchanges™ readers, the implication is clear: the future of rare earth supply chains hinges as much on metallurgical precision as on resource access. Defining reliable operating windows—not chasing theoretical optima—may be the difference between stranded deposits and viable supply.
Citation: Choi J., Hong G., & Kim W. Scientific Reports (2026). DOI: 10.1038/s41598-026-47746-6.
0 Comments
No replies yet
Loading new replies...
Moderator
Join the full discussion at the Rare Earth Exchanges Forum →