Highlights
- Chinese researchers at Anhui University discovered two microscopic mechanisms limiting heavy rare earth element diffusion in permanent magnets used in EVs and clean energy.
- The study reveals chemical heterogeneity and specific intergranular phases (ZrBโ and REFeโ) act as barriers, reducing diffusion efficiency of dysprosium and terbium.
- The breakthrough offers a new framework for optimizing magnet design and addressing China's strategic imbalance between scarce heavy rare earths and abundant light rare earths.
In a potentially significant development for the global rare earth sector, a Chinese research team has identified for the first time the two main microscopic mechanisms that hinder the diffusion efficiency of heavy rare earth elementsโmaterials critical to magnets used in electric vehicles, defense systems, and clean energy technologies.
Professor Wang Shouguo
The breakthrough comes from Professor Wang Shouguoโs group at the School of Materials Science and Engineering at Anhui University (opens in a new tab), in collaboration with Beijing University of Technology (opens in a new tab) and Chinaโs National Key Laboratory for Rare Earth Permanent Magnet Materials (opens in a new tab). Their findings were published in the journal Advanced Functional Materials.
Rare earth permanent magnets are indispensable to high-tech manufacturing and emerging industries. Yet Chinaโthe worldโs dominantproducerโfaces a structural imbalance: strategic heavy rare earths like dysprosium and terbium remain in short supply and inefficiently used, while light rare earths such as lanthanum and cerium are stockpiled in excess.
To address this bottleneck, the researchers proposed a bold new theory: that internal chemical inconsistencies and complex grain boundary structures within high-abundance rare earth magnets are restricting the pathways and rate of heavy rare earth atom diffusion. In short, itโs not just a manufacturing issueโitโs a materials science one.
Using advanced magnetic testing and structural analysis tools, the team demonstrated two key findings:
- Chemical heterogeneity within crystal grains leads to the selective diffusion of heavy rare-earth atoms.
- Specific intergranularphasesโnamely ZrBโ and REFeโโact as physical barriers, blocking diffusion and reducing overall efficiency.
This is the first time these two mechanisms have been scientifically confirmed. According to Wang, the discovery offers a fresh theoretical framework for designing more efficient magnet structures and improving the utilization of Chinaโs limited heavy rare earth resources.
Looking ahead, the Anhui team plans to further pursue high-performance magnetic materials through a โtheory-driven, demand-orientedโ R&D modelโsignaling Chinaโs intent to maintain technological leadership and deepen control over the rare earth supply chain.
Disclaimer: This article is based on reporting published state-owned entity in China. The information has not yet been independently verified. Readers should consult additional sources for confirmation.
ยฉ!-- /wp:paragraph -->
0 Comments