The 10-PPM Trap: Why Five-Nines Terbium and Dysprosium Challenge Western Ambitions

Apr 27, 2026

Highlights

  • Separating Tb and Dy to 99.999% purity is fundamentally harder than 99.955%—that final 0.044% represents a 45× tighter impurity budget where everything from solvent degradation to equipment contamination becomes critical.
  • China has built decades of process memory and flowsheet optimization that ex-China projects are attempting to compress into years, meaning most will achieve 99.5-99.9% purity but struggle with consistent commercial-scale five-nines material.
  • In high-performance magnets for EVs and defense, delivering 99.955% instead of the promised 99.999% isn't rounding—it's breach, triggering price penalties, qualification delays, and loss of credibility in opacity-defined markets.

Separating terbium (Tb) and dysprosium (Dy) to 99.999% purity is not just difficult—it is a fundamentally different industrial challenge. The chemistry is unforgiving, the process is long and capital-intensive, and the final few hundred ppm define success or failure. Delivering 99.955% instead of 99.999% is not “close”—it is off-spec, with real commercial consequences.

Where Chemistry Turns Punitive

The rare earth story is often told at the mine. The real battle is in separation.

Tb³⁺ and Dy³⁺ sit side by side in the lanthanide series, differing by just ~0.013 Å in ionic radius. They behave almost identically in solution, co-occur in the same mineral systems, and resist clean separation. There are no clean separations—only incremental improvements.

That’s why industry still relies on multi-stage solvent extraction (SX)—often dozens to hundreds of stages across full separation trains—not because it’s elegant, but because nothing else scales. Each stage delivers marginal improvement. Getting into the 95–99% range is achievable with industrial-scale SX systems. The final fractions of a percent are where costs, yield losses, and process complexity escalate sharply.

The Last 0.044% Is the Whole Game

Moving from 99.955% to 99.999% sounds trivial. It isn’t.

  • 99.955% = ~450 ppm impurities
  • 99.999% = ~10 ppm impurities

That’s a 45× tighter impurity budget.

At that level, it’s no longer just about separating adjacent rare earths. Everything matters:

  • Solvent degradation and recycle loops
  • Water purity and plant hygiene
  • Equipment and tankage contamination
  • Sample handling discipline
  • Analytical verification, where ICP-MS requires advanced interference correction, calibration discipline, and tight method control

Even well-designed flowsheets that achieve >99.5% Dy can produce Tb side streams that often require additional upgrading cycles. Five-nines is not a step—it is a system-wide constraint.

Why Ex-China Players Will Struggle

China didn’t just build capacity—it built process memory: decades of iteration, operator expertise, and flowsheet optimization.

Ex-China projects are attempting to compress that learning curve into a few years.

That is a difficult proposition to say the least, often requiring meaningful schedule extensions—frequently on the order of 12–24 months in practice.

Many will produce:

  • 99.5%–99.9% material (real achievement)
  • ~99.95% under optimized conditions (stretch performance)

But consistent, commercial-scale 99.999% Tb/Dy? That is a different business—one where many projects are likely to struggle, especially at scale and consistency.

When “Close Enough” Fails

If a supplier promises five-nines and delivers 99.955%, the issue isn’t rounding—it’s breach.

Dy and Tb are used in permanent magnets to maintain coercivity at elevated temperatures. Impurities directly affect:

  • Magnetic performance
  • Qualification timelines
  • Reliability in EV and defense systems

The consequences are predictable:

  • Price penalties or rejection
  • Reprocessing costs
  • Slower customer qualification
  • Loss of trust and future contracts

In a market already defined by opacity and qualification risk, overpromising purity is one of the fastest ways to destroy credibility, and in some cases, contractual or legal exposure.

Bottom Line

Five-nines Tb and Dy is not a marketing spec. It is a capability moat. And for now, most of that moat still sits inside China.

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By Daniel

Inspired to launch Rare Earth Exchanges in part due to his lifelong passion for geology and mineralogy, and patriotism, to ensure America and free market economies develop their own rare earth and critical mineral supply chains.

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Achieving 99.999% terbium dysprosium separation isn't close enough—it's a capability moat. Why the last 0.044% defines market winners. (read full article...)

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