A team of researchers including Rice University's James Tour and Shichen Xu has developed an ultrafast, one-step method to recover rare earth elements (REEs) from discarded magnets using an innovative approach that offers significant environmental and economic benefits over traditional recycling methods. Credit: Jeff Fitlow/Rice University.

A team of researchers including Rice University's James Tour and Shichen Xu has developed an ultrafast, one-step method to recover rare earth elements (REEs) from discarded magnets using an innovative approach that offers significant environmental and economic benefits over traditional recycling methods.

Their study is published in the .

Conventional rare earth recycling is energy-heavy and creates . The research team's method uses flash Joule heating (FJH), which rapidly raises material temperatures to thousands of degrees within milliseconds, and to extract REEs from magnet waste in seconds without needing water or acids. The breakthrough supports U.S. efforts to boost domestic mineral supplies.

"We've demonstrated that we can recover from electronic waste in seconds with minimal environmental footprint," said Tour, the T.T. and W.F. Chao Professor of Chemistry, professor of materials science and nanoengineering, and corresponding study author. "It's the kind of leap forward we need to secure a resilient and circular supply chain."

Hypothesis rooted in thermodynamic selectivity

The researchers proposed that FJH combined with chlorine gas could take advantage of differences in Gibbs free energy, a measure of a material's reactivity, and varying boiling points to selectively remove non-REE elements from magnet waste.

In the presence of chlorine gas, elements such as iron or cobalt would chlorinate and vaporize first, leaving the REE oxides behind.

A team of researchers including Rice University's James Tour and Shichen Xu has developed an ultrafast, one-step method to recover rare earth elements (REEs) from discarded magnets using an innovative approach that offers significant environmental and economic benefits over traditional recycling methods. Credit: Jeff Fitlow/Rice University.

The research team tested this process on neodymium iron boron and samarium cobalt magnet waste using ultrafast FJH under a chlorine atmosphere. By precisely controlling the temperatures and heating the materials within seconds, the non-REE elements were converted into volatile chlorides, which then separated from the solid REEs.

The scientists observed that the nonrare earth elements were removed almost instantaneously, enabling the recovery of a purer rare earth residue.

"The thermodynamic advantage made the process both efficient and clean," said Xu, the first author of the study and a postdoctoral associate at Rice.

"This method not only works in tiny fractions of the time compared to traditional routes, but it also avoids any use of water or acid, something that wasn't thought possible until now."

In addition to laboratory experiments, the researchers conducted a comprehensive life cycle assessment (LCA) and techno-economic analysis (TEA) to benchmark their process. They achieved over 90% purity and yield for REE recovery in a single step. The LCA and TEA revealed an 87% reduction in , an 84% decrease in and a 54% reduction in operating costs compared to hydrometallurgy.

The process eliminates the need for water and acid inputs entirely, according to the study.

Toward scalable, circular rare earth economy

The new method makes it possible to build small or large, easy-to-use recycling units that can be placed close to where is collected. These local systems can process used magnets quickly and cleanly, cutting down on shipping costs and helping the environment.

"The results show that this is more than an academic exercise—it's a viable industrial pathway," Tour said.

This Rice has been licensed to Flash Metals U.S., a in Texas' Chambers County that will be in production mode by the first quarter of 2026 to capitalize on this process.

More information: Tour, James M., Sustainable separation of rare earth elements from wastes, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2025).

Journal information: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Provided by Rice University