12.4 C
Munich
星期四, 2 7 月, 2026

Boston Metal gets a $75 million lifeline to produce critical metals

Must read

Baywatch’s Brooks Nader risks spilling over risky plunging top as curves almost slip out

Baywatch babe Brooks Nader has teased fans with her latest look wearing just a halter neck top with gaping sides and a plunging neckline...

It's not just the iPhone 18 Pro price boom – older Apple devices get costlier, too

Is there a silver lining to the whole mess? Sort of. #It039s #iPhone #Pro #price #boom #older #Apple #devices #costlier

Gran, 77, crushed to death as she hung out washing

Clarice Berry, 77, was left buried under 10ft of rubble when the gable end of her semi-detached house came down when she was hanging...

Inside Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce New York wedding: Lobster, fries and a castle

Whst is being called America's 'royal wedding' is set to take place this weekend, with music megastar Taylor Swift and NFL player Travis Kelce...

In addition to steel, Boston Metal has also worked to use its technology with other metals, and a subsidiary (Boston Metal do Brazil) is setting up a commercial facility in Brazil to produce niobium, tantalum, and tin. The funding will help support that facility’s operation as well as future efforts to produce critical metals like vanadium, nickel, and chromium, says CEO Tadeu Carneiro. The funding comes after the company faced cash-flow problems following an industrial accident at the Brazil facility earlier this year.

Boston Metal’s core technology is called molten oxide electrolysis (MOE). It involves running electric current through a reactor filled with ore dissolved in a molten electrolyte. The electricity heats everything up to about 1,600 °C (3,000 °F) and drives chemical reactions that separate the desired metal (or metals) from the ore. The metal gathers at the bottom of the reactor, where it can be siphoned off.

In early 2025, Boston Metal completed the largest run of its pilot industrial cell in Woburn, Massachusetts, producing about a ton of steel.

But the focus is currently on making other metals, which are more valuable and can command a higher price. The company’s Brazilian subsidiary is working to test and start up an industrial-scale plant that takes in a low-grade material and makes a mixture of critical metals. Niobium, for example, is used in some steel alloys, as well as in alloys used to make jet engines and the superconducting magnets of MRI scanners. Tantalum is used in aerospace applications like rocket nozzles and turbine blades, as well as medical devices and electronics.

Construction on the Brazil plant kicked off in 2024 and took about 18 months, but the company ran into some challenges that delayed official startup.

#Boston #Metal #million #lifeline #produce #critical #metals

- Advertisement -

More articles

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

- Advertisement -

Latest article

Baywatch’s Brooks Nader risks spilling over risky plunging top as curves almost slip out

Baywatch babe Brooks Nader has teased fans with her latest look wearing just a halter neck top with gaping sides and a plunging neckline...

It's not just the iPhone 18 Pro price boom – older Apple devices get costlier, too

Is there a silver lining to the whole mess? Sort of. #It039s #iPhone #Pro #price #boom #older #Apple #devices #costlier

Gran, 77, crushed to death as she hung out washing

Clarice Berry, 77, was left buried under 10ft of rubble when the gable end of her semi-detached house came down when she was hanging...

Inside Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce New York wedding: Lobster, fries and a castle

Whst is being called America's 'royal wedding' is set to take place this weekend, with music megastar Taylor Swift and NFL player Travis Kelce...

Apple's first-ever foldable iPhone is as popular as the plague, as it turns out

Wait, wasn't the iPhone Ultra supposed to be a hit?! #Apple039s #firstever #foldable #iPhone #popular #plague #turns