Highlights
- University of Pennsylvania researchers introduce SES-Q (Separations by Excited State Quenching), a photochemical approach that exploits light-driven electronic differences between rare earths rather than relying on conventional size-based solvent extraction.
- The method could disrupt China's rare earth processing monopoly by using low-intensity LEDs to trigger element-specific reactions, potentially separating difficult pairs like Dy/Y or Dy/Ho that are nearly impossible to separate today.
- While promising, SES-Q remains early-stage science requiring scalability, faster kinetics, materials robustness, and integration with existing industrial processes before commercial viability can be achieved.
Light Over Liquids: New Preprint (opens in a new tab) Proposes a Photochemical Path to Break Rare Earth Processing Bottlenecks
A new preprint led by Kevin P. Ruoff and Professor Eric J. Schelter of the University of Pennsylvaniaโspanning the Vagelos Laboratory for Energy Science and Technology (opens in a new tab) and UPennโs Departments of Chemistry, Earth & Environmental Science, and Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering (opens in a new tab)โintroduces a provocative idea: rare earth elements might be separated using light-driven chemistry, not brute-force solvent extraction.
Titled โSeparations by Excited State Quenching (SES-Q): An Emerging Concept for Reactive Rare Earth Separations,โ the ChemRxiv manuscript synthesizes years of experimental evidence to argue that electronic and photophysical differences between rare earths could be harnessed to selectively sort them, potentially challenging the entrenched, China-dominated processing paradigm.
In simple terms, instead of separating rare earths by tiny size differencesโan approach that requires hundreds or thousands of extraction cyclesโthe authors propose using how different rare earths interact with light to make some react faster than others. Those reaction differences could then be tied to physical separations such as precipitation, solubility changes, or chromatography.
Table of Contents
Why This Matters: A Chemical Root of a Geopolitical Problem
Chinaโs dominance in rare earth processing is not just a mining story; it is a chemistry story. Conventional solvent extraction works, but it is slow, capital-intensive, chemically wasteful, and difficult to replicate outside Chinaโs established infrastructure. The UPenn team argues that this technological lock-in exists because industry has focused almost exclusively on ionic size, ignoring other intrinsic propertiesโespecially excited-state behavior.
Rare earths differ in their 4f-electron configurations. Some, like europium or terbium, readily accept or quench excited energy states; others, like yttrium, cannot. The SES-Q concept proposes exploiting those differences so that, under light irradiation, certain rare earth complexes undergo chemical changes while others remain inert. Over time, mixtures could be biased toward separable products.
What the Study Shows
Rather than reporting a single new experiment, the paper systematically reviews and re-interprets dozens of photochemical systemsโincluding photoisomerization, photocycloaddition, and light-driven redox reactionsโwhere reaction rates depend on the identity of the rare earth. Key findings include:
- Excited-state quenching is element-specific, driven by electronic structure rather than size.
- In several systems, neighboring rare earths (e.g., Dy vs. Y or Dy vs. Ho), which are notoriously difficult to separate today, show dramatically different photochemical behaviors.
- Light-driven processes could, in principle, use low-intensity LEDs rather than lasers, making them more practical than earlier photochemical separation attempts.
Taken together, these observations support SES-Q as a conceptual separation strategy, not yet a commercial process.
What It Would Take to Commercialize SES-Q
The authors are explicitโand Rare Earth Exchanges agreesโthat SES-Q is early-stage science. To move from preprint to plant, several hurdles must be cleared:
1. Reaction Discovery to Engineering Translation
Laboratory photochemical reactions must be coupled to scalable physical separations (e.g., selective precipitation or phase transfer).
2. Throughput and Kinetics
Reaction rates must be fast enough to compete with industrial solvent extraction, not just demonstrate selectivity.
3. Materials Robustness
Many candidate systems involve air- or moisture-sensitive compounds. Industrial systems must tolerate real-world feedstocks and impurities.
4. Recyclability and Cost
Ligands and photoactive materials must be reusable, inexpensive, and compatible with circular processing.
5. Integration with Existing Flowsheets
SES-Q is more likely to augment current processesโreducing stages or targeting specific separationsโthan replace solvent extraction outright.
Limitations and Controversial Points
This work is a ChemRxiv preprint, meaning it has not yet undergone peer review. No full rare earth separation has been demonstrated at scale, and many examples discussed rely on solid-state or idealized systems. Skeptics may question whether photochemical selectivity can survive the complexity of real ores and recycled materials.
Still, dismissing SES-Q as impractical would repeat a familiar mistake: assuming that rare earth separation chemistry is โsolvedโ simply because it exists.
REEx Takeaway
This study does not end Chinaโs rare earth processing monopolyโbut it challenges the chemical assumptions that sustain it. If even part of SES-Q proves scalable, it could lower barriers for non-Chinese processors and introduce entirely new design space for rare earth separation. For investors, policymakers, and technologists, that alone makes this work worth watching.
Source: Ruoff, K. P.; Schelter, E. J. Separations by Excited State Quenching (SES-Q): An Emerging Concept for Reactive Rare Earth Separations. ChemRxiv Preprint, 2025
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