Highlights
- University of Virginia researchers developed a single-step, non-electrolytic molten-salt process to convert rare earth oxides directly into Nd-Fe-B and Sm-Co master alloys.
- The process scaled beyond 100 grams at temperatures below 900°C, with optimized conditions around 1050°C, potentially reducing manufacturing costs and energy use by roughly 20%.
- Finished magnets fell short of expected magnetic performance due to incomplete purification, residual slag contamination, and consolidation challenges that must be solved before commercialization.
- The work addresses a critical but underappreciated supply chain bottleneck: converting refined rare earth oxides into magnet-ready alloys efficiently and at scale.
- Investors should treat this as a promising manufacturing proof-of-concept rather than a market-ready breakthrough, as significant engineering work remains ahead.
Researchers led by Professor Xiaodong (Chris) Li (opens in a new tab) at the University of Virginia, working with collaborators at Ames Laboratory, Rare Earth Salts, Materion Corporation, and Electron Energy Corporation (Permag), have completed a U.S. Department of Energy-funded project (opens in a new tab) that could simplify one of the most expensive and technically challenging steps in making rare earth magnets. Instead of converting rare earth oxides into pure metals through several separate industrial processes before producing magnet alloys, the team developed a single-step, non-electrolytic process that performs much of that work simultaneously. The researchers successfully produced neodymium-iron-boron (Nd-Fe-B) and samarium-cobalt (Sm-Co) master alloys, demonstrated production at temperatures below 900°C, scaled production beyond 100 grams, and estimate the approach could eventually reduce manufacturing costs and energy consumption by roughly 20%. Importantly, however, this is a DOE final technical report—not yet a peer-reviewed journal publication—and the authors are clear that additional engineering work is required before commercial deployment.
Why This Matters
Rare earth magnets power electric vehicles, wind turbines, industrial robots, medical equipment, smartphones, and many defense systems. Making those magnets requires converting rare earth oxides—the form produced after chemical separation—into alloys that manufacturers can process into finished magnets. That conversion remains one of the least discussed but most difficult and expensive parts of the supply chain.
The DOE project attempts to combine several manufacturing steps into one molten-salt process using calcium chloride and calcium metal, potentially reducing time, energy use, and production costs. Extensive thermodynamic modeling was paired with laboratory testing, electron microscopy, X-ray diffraction, and magnetic characterization to optimize the process.
Professor Xiaodong (Chris) Li

What the Team Actually Achieved
The researchers successfully produced Nd-Fe-B and Sm-Co master alloys directly from rare earth oxides, scaled production from laboratory batches to more than 100 grams, demonstrated processing below 900°C, and showed that the process can be scaled without major compositional changes. They also found that argon atmospheres improved rare earth recovery and identified optimized operating conditions of roughly 1050°C for the best overall process performance.
The Reality Check
The report does not claim commercial success.
Although the chemistry worked and master alloys were produced, the finished magnets failed to reach expected magnetic performance. The researchers attribute this primarily to incomplete purification, residual slag contamination, and difficulties separating and consolidating the master alloys into high-quality magnet feedstock. These remain the principal engineering bottlenecks before commercialization.
REEx Investor Perspective
Rare Earth Exchanges® believes this work deserves attention because it tackles a bottleneck that receives far less attention than mining or rare earth separation: converting refined rare earth oxides into magnet-ready alloys efficiently and at scale.
If the remaining purification and processing challenges can be solved, this technology could strengthen domestic magnet manufacturing while lowering production costs. For now, investors should view the work as an encouraging manufacturing proof-of-concept rather than a market-ready breakthrough. The science has advanced. Commercial execution remains the next—and hardest—step.
Citation: Li X. (Principal Investigator), Development of Industrial Scale Rare Earth Master Alloys from Their Native Oxides for Magnet Production, U.S. Department of Energy Final Technical Report, Award DE-EE0009437, submitted December 18, 2025.
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