Available for Licensing - Electrochemical Rare Earth Recovery from Coal Fly Ash: Turn Waste Stockpiles into Critical Materials Revenue

Project ID: BA-1747 FederalOpportunitiesSpecial Notice
Overview
AgencyDepartment of Energy
Deadline05/01/26
Posted03/04/26
Estimated ValueNot Provided
Set AsideNone
NAICS21229 - Other Metal Ore Mining
PSCAJ11 - General Science And Technology R&D Services; General Science And Technology; Basic Research
LocationIdaho Falls, ID 83401 United States
Description
Primary

Summary

Electrochemical Rare Earth Recovery from Coal Fly Ash: Turn Waste Stockpiles into Critical Materials Revenue

Technology Overview

Researchers at Idaho National Laboratory have developed an electrochemical process that selectively extracts rare earth elements (REEs) from coal fly ash leachate using electricity instead of chemical reagents. The technology employs tuned anodic electrosorption with functionalized mesoporous carbon electrodes to achieve superior separation of REEs from competing metal ions. Opportunity Coal fly ash represents a massive, untapped resource: - 158 million tons produced annually in the U.S. - 1.5 billion tons currently stockpiled - Contains 74,000-106,000 metric tons of rare earth elements Current extraction methods don't work at scale. Traditional solvent extraction relies on large volumes of chemical reagents, generating significant hazardous waste and requiring costly disposal. Poor selectivity (separation factor around 1) means you need 50-200 extraction cycles to achieve high purity. This translates to slow processing times (days to weeks), high operating costs, and growing regulatory pressure. Bottom line: there's no efficient, cost-effective, and environmentally sustainable technology for REE recovery from coal fly ash at commercial scale.

Competitive Advantages

Conventional solvent extraction approaches: - Separation factors typically below 10, requiring 50 to 200 extraction cycles - Processing times measured in days to weeks - Heavy reliance on chemical reagents - Significant hazardous waste generation and disposal costs - Large footprint, batch-based systems - Increasing regulatory and ESG pressure INL electrochemical process: - Separation Factor ~7 - Processing completed in hours - Electricity-driven, reagent-free operation - Minimal waste generation - Compact, modular system design - Lower disposal burden and ESG-aligned operation

Additional Benefits

60% recovery efficiency, reusable electrodes, lower operating costs, faster time to revenue.

Market Applications

- Coal Power Plants (200+ in U.S.) - Convert fly ash from liability to revenue stream - REE Recovery Companies - Replace chemical extraction with cleaner, faster processing - Environmental Remediation - Process mining tailings, contaminated soils - Critical Materials Supply Chain - Domestic REE sourcing for defense and electronics - Beyond Coal Fly Ash - Applicable to any complex mixed-ion separation challenge

Current Stage

Laboratory-scale validation Underway

Next Step

Pilot-scale demonstration with commercial partner Idaho National Laboratory is seeking industrial partners to license and commercialize this patent-pending technology. INL does not procure services as part of its collaboration agreements.

Contacts
Contact nameJavier Martinez
Contact emailjavier.martinez@inl.gov
Contact phoneNone
Same Region Opportunities

Hanger Remodel

Agency: Department of Energy

Location: Idaho Falls, Idaho

NAICS: Not Provided