Plasma Torch

The Universal Metal Factory: How UHTP™ Transforms Any Feedstock Into Pure Metals

Plasma Torch

The history of metallurgy is a history of specialisation. Copper smelting requires one set of furnaces, chemistry, and expertise. Lead smelting requires another. Rare earth refining requires yet another — and it’s so complex that China controls 70% of global capacity. Lithium extraction demands sulphuric acid and massive water consumption. Recycling electronics requires a different process entirely. And don’t even ask about recovering metals from tailings or slag — most companies have simply given up.

Driven by quarterly returns, long development lead times, the “not my business” ethos, and the chasm between PhDs and MBAs on what it takes to move innovation into commercial reality, the western capitalist system has simply failed to produce anything meaningful in the last 60 years. Hence China’s lead.

Each metal, each ore type, each waste stream has demanded its own bespoke infrastructure, chemistry, and supply chain.

But what if that wasn’t true anymore?

What if there was one platform that could extract pure metals from any feedstock — ore, recycled e-waste, mining tailings, spent catalysts, slag, or industrial waste — using the same core technology? A platform that didn’t care whether your feedstock was complex or simple, high-grade or low-grade, single-element or multi-element?

Welcome to UHTP™ — Ultra-High Temperature Pyrometallurgy™. It’s not an incremental improvement on traditional smelting. It’s a fundamentally different approach to metallurgy. And it’s about to rewrite the rules of how metals are made.


The Constraints of Traditional Metallurgy

To understand why UHTP™ is revolutionary, you first need to understand what’s holding traditional metallurgy back.

The Problem: Feed stock Specificity

Traditional metallurgy is bound by material constraints:

1. Melting Point Incompatibility

Different metals have wildly different melting points. Copper melts at 1,085°C. Lead melts at 327°C. Rare earths melt at 800–1,600°C depending on the element. When you try to smelt a complex ore containing multiple metals, they don’t melt together nicely — they segregate, oxidise, or form unwanted compounds. This is why copper smelting is not the same as lead smelting.

2. Chemical Selectivity Limits

Acid leaching dissolves some metals, not others. Sulphuric acid dissolves copper beautifully but won’t touch lead. Hydrochloric acid works differently again. This means every ore type requires a custom chemical recipe — and even then, you’re lucky to achieve 85–90% recovery. The rest becomes waste or requires additional processing steps.

3. Mineral Encapsulation

Many valuable metals are locked inside complex mineral matrices. Rare earth elements sit inside silicate minerals. Platinum group metals are inter-grown with base metals. Lithium is trapped inside spodumene crystals. Traditional flotation and gravity separation can liberate some of these, but fine particles, inter-grown minerals, and complex geometries mean significant material loss.

4. Energy Intensity

Traditional smelting requires sustained high temperatures (1,200–1,600°C) for hours. This means massive energy consumption — and that energy typically comes from fossil fuels. A single copper smelter can consume 50+ MW of power continuously.

5. Chemical Waste

Acid leaching creates toxic wastewater. Flotation uses hazardous reagents. Smelting produces slag and off-gases. Each step generates secondary waste streams that require treatment, disposal, or storage — adding cost and environmental burden.

The Result: Inefficiency at Scale

The consequence is that only high-grade, economically obvious ores get processed. Low-grade deposits, complex ores, and waste streams are left behind — either abandoned or stored in tailings dams.

This means:

  • Stranded resources: Billions of tons of minerals remain unmined or unrecovered.
  • Geopolitical vulnerability: Only a few countries have the willpower and patience to build the infrastructure to process certain metals, creating monopolies (China for rare earths, Russia for palladium, Türkiye for chrome etc.).
  • Environmental liability: Tailings dams pose long-term risks. Mining waste leaches toxic elements into groundwater for decades. Dam failures can kill hundreds of people.
  • Circular economy failure: The same logic applies to recycled materials. They are often too complex or low-grade to process economically, so they end up in landfills.

The UHTP™ Principle — Vaporisation as Liberation

UHTP™ breaks every constraint that traditional metallurgy faces. But it doesn’t do this through brute force or incremental improvement. Instead, it operates in a completely different domain: the gas phase.

How UHTP™ Works: The Core Principle

UHTP™ uses a thermal plasma torch operating at approximately 10,000°C — roughly the surface temperature of the sun. At this temperature, something remarkable happens:

All molecular bonds break.

  • Copper ore (CuFeS₂) → Vaporised
  • Rare earth oxides (Nd₂O₃, Tb₄O₇) → Vaporised
  • Lead-zinc sulfides (PbS, ZnS) → Vaporised
  • Silicon dioxide gangue (SiO₂) → Vaporised

Everything becomes atomic or ionic gas.

Destroying the Crystal Lattice
Destroying the Crystal Lattice

This is the key insight: In the eyes of plasma, all materials are equal. There is no “this ore is too complex” or “this metal won’t melt with that one.” There is only gaseous atoms – indeed ions.

Why Vaporisation Solves the Problem

Once everything is vaporised, the traditional constraints disappear:

1. No Melting Point Issues
If everything is a gas, melting points are irrelevant. Copper and lead don’t need to melt together — they’re already separated at the atomic level.

2. No Chemical Selectivity Limits
You’re not using selective chemistry anymore. You’re using physics. And physics treats all atoms the same.

3. No Mineral Encapsulation
Inter-grown minerals? Doesn’t matter. Fine particles? Doesn’t matter. The plasma vaporises everything, regardless of particle size or crystal structure.

4. Energy Efficiency
The plasma is only active for seconds. The feed-stock enters, gets vaporised, and exits. It’s not a sustained high-temperature process like traditional smelting — it’s a rapid, controlled destruction followed by intelligent recovery.

5. No Chemical Waste
No acids, no reagents, no toxic byproducts. The only outputs are recovered metals and stable, non-toxic residues.


The Separation Engine — The Real Innovation

Now here’s where most people misunderstand UHTP™.

They think: “Okay, so you vaporise everything. Then what? Don’t you just get a mixed vapor cloud?”

The answer is no — and this is where the real innovation lies.

IPRI doesn’t just vaporise and hope for the best. We engineer the recovery process to separate different elements from each other — even after they’ve been vaporised together.

After vaporisation, the hot gas plume is fed into a precisely engineered quench system with multiple temperature zones and controlled gas chemistry. This is where the separation happens.

Think of it like this: If traditional smelting is like trying to sort a mixed pile of different metals by hand, UHTP™ is like sorting them as they’re being poured out — using physics to separate them before they even solidify.

Here’s how it works:

Multi-Zone Controlled Quench — The Separation Engine

After exiting the plasma at ~10,000°C, the vaporised material enters a multi-stage quench system with precise temperature control and gas chemistry. As temperature drops progressively, elements condense in sequence based on their boiling points — highest boiling point elements condense first, lowest boiling point elements condense last. This enables natural fractionation of different elements into distinct streams.


Zone 1: Ultra-High Temperature Condensation (3,000–5,000°C)

Gas composition: Inert atmosphere (Argon) with optional reducing gas (Hydrogen)

What condenses first (highest boiling points): Refractory metals and high-boiling-point rare earths

  • Tungsten, Rhenium, Tantalum, Molybdenum, Niobium
  • Platinum, Palladium, Iridium, Rhodium, Ruthenium
  • Uranium, Thorium
  • Rare earths: Cerium, Lanthanum, Yttrium, Gadolinium, Praseodymium, Terbium, Neodymium

Form: Solid metal particles or refractory oxides

Why it works: These elements have boiling points above 3,000°C. They condense almost immediately as temperature drops below their boiling points, forming distinct solid particles that can be collected via gravity settling or cyclones. The reducing atmosphere prevents unwanted oxidation of reactive metals.


Zone 2: High Temperature Condensation (2,500–3,000°C)

Gas composition: Mildly oxidizing (Argon + 1–2% O₂)

What condensesPrecious metals and mid-range elements

  • Gold, Silver, Copper, Iron, Nickel, Cobalt
  • Rare earths: Dysprosium, Holmium, Erbium, Scandium
  • Germanium, Beryllium

Form: Metal droplets (for precious metals) or oxide particles (for rare earths)

Why it works: These elements have boiling points in the 2,500–3,000°C range. They condense in this zone as distinct particles, physically separated from the ultra-high-temperature refractory metals above. Oxidation is controlled — some elements prefer metallic form, others form stable oxides.


Zone 3: Medium Temperature Condensation (1,500–2,500°C)

Gas composition: Oxidising (Argon + 3–5% O₂)

What condensesBase metals and lower-boiling-point elements

  • Tin, Lead, Aluminum, Chromium
  • Manganese, Indium, Gallium
  • Zinc (partial condensation — some carries to lower zones)
  • Antimony, Bismuth

Form: Metal droplets or oxide particles (Sb₂O₃, Bi₂O₃, etc.)

Why it works: These elements have boiling points between 1,500–2,500°C. They remain gaseous until temperature drops below their boiling points, then condense as distinct particles. The oxidising atmosphere promotes oxide formation for elements that prefer that state.


Zone 4: Low Temperature Condensation (600–1,500°C)

Gas composition: Chlorinating (Argon + HCl vapor)

What condensesVolatile metals and toxic elements

  • Zinc, Cadmium, Lead (secondary condensation), Arsenic, Selenium
  • Tellurium, Rubidium, Cesium, Potassium
  • Sodium

Form: Chloride aerosols (ZnCl₂, CdCl₂, AsCl₃, etc.) or oxide particles

Why it works: These elements have boiling points below 1,500°C — they remain gaseous through the higher-temperature zones. As temperature drops into this range, they condense preferentially into chlorides (if HCl is present) or oxides. The chlorinating atmosphere stabilises volatile elements into less-volatile compounds. Elements condense as fine nanoparticles or aerosols — captured by HEPA filters or electrostatic precipitators.


Zone 5: Very Low Temperature Condensation (100–600°C)

Gas composition: Mild oxidising or inert (Argon + trace O₂)

What condensesHighly volatile elements

  • Mercury, Sulfur, and any remaining volatile species
  • Residual trace elements

Form: Fine aerosol particles or vapor

Why it works: These are the most volatile elements — boiling points below 600°C. They only condense as temperature drops significantly. Mercury remains partially gaseous until very low temperatures. This zone captures the “tail end” of volatiles before they reach the scrubber.


Zone 6: Final Capture & Scrubbing (<100°C)

Gas composition: Aqueous or acidic scrubber (water, phosphoric acid, or hydrochloric acid)

What’s capturedResidual volatiles, hazardous gases, trace elements

  • Any remaining Mercury vapor
  • Residual HCl or other gaseous compounds
  • Fine aerosol particles that escaped earlier zones
  • Trace contaminants

Form: Dissolved ions in solution or fine suspended particles

Why it works: The scrubber is the final safety net. Any element that didn’t condense in the temperature-controlled zones above gets captured here — either as dissolved ions (if soluble in the scrubber liquid) or as suspended fine particles. This ensures zero emissions — nothing escapes to atmosphere.

The Result: Multiple Pure or Near-Pure Outputs

Each output is enriched in specific elements — ready for further processing or direct use:

Output 1: Refractory Metals & High-Boiling-Point Rare Earths (Zone 1: 3,000–5,000°C)

Collected via: Gravity settling, cyclones, or magnetic separation

Contains:

  • Refractory metals: Tungsten, Rhenium, Tantalum, Molybdenum, Niobium
  • Platinum group metals: Platinum, Palladium, Iridium, Rhodium, Ruthenium
  • Nuclear metals: Uranium, Thorium (as oxides)
  • Carrier rare earths: Cerium, Lanthanum, Yttrium, Gadolinium, Praseodymium, Terbium, Neodymium (as oxides)

Form: Solid particles, metal droplets, or refractory oxides

Value: Extremely high — refractory metals worth USD 1,000–50,000/kg; rare earth oxides worth USD 5,000–50,000/ton


Output 2: Precious Metals & Mid-Range Elements (Zone 2: 2,500–3,000°C)

Collected via: Gravity settling, density separation, or magnetic collection

Contains:

  • Precious metals: Gold, Silver, Copper
  • Base metals: Iron, Nickel, Cobalt
  • Mid-range rare earths: Dysprosium, Holmium, Erbium, Scandium
  • Specialty metals: Germanium, Beryllium

Form: Metal droplets or oxide particles

Value: High — precious metals worth USD 2,000–60,000/kg; rare earth oxides worth USD 5,000–20,000/ton; base metals worth USD 5–15/kg


Output 3: Base Metals & Lower-Boiling-Point Elements (Zone 3: 1,500–2,500°C)

Collected via: HEPA filters, electrostatic precipitators, or cyclones

Contains:

  • Base metals: Tin, Lead, Aluminum, Chromium, Manganese
  • Semiconductors: Indium, Gallium
  • Toxic elements (stable form): Antimony oxide (Sb₂O₃), Bismuth oxide (Bi₂O₃)
  • Partial zinc condensation

Form: Metal droplets, oxide particles, or nanoparticles

Value: Medium — metals worth USD 1–10/kg; oxides worth USD 2,000–10,000/ton


Output 4: Volatile Metals & Toxic Elements (Zone 4: 600–1,500°C)

Collected via: HEPA/ULPA filters or electrostatic precipitators

Contains:

  • Volatile metals: Zinc (primary), Cadmium, Rubidium, Cesium, Potassium, Sodium
  • Toxic elements (stabilised): Arsenic oxide (As₂O₃), Selenium oxide (SeO₂), Tellurium oxide (TeO₂)
  • Secondary lead/tin condensation as chlorides or oxides

Form: Nanoparticles, fine aerosol particles, or chloride/oxide compounds

Value: Medium to High — Zn worth USD 1–3/kg; Se/Te worth USD 10–200/kg; As/Cd worth USD 2–5/kg. Critical: Toxic elements now stabilized as non-leachable compounds (As₂O₃, SeO₂, CdO) instead of mobile, bioavailable forms


Output 5: Highly Volatile Elements (Zone 5: 100–600°C)

Collected via: Fine mist eliminators, demister pads, or additional cyclones

Contains:

  • Mercury (partial — some carries to scrubber)
  • Sulfur
  • Residual trace volatiles

Form: Fine aerosol particles, vapor, or condensed droplets

Value: Low to Medium — Mercury worth USD 10–30/kg (if recovered); Sulfur worth USD 50–200/ton


Output 6: Final Scrubber Solution & Residual Capture (Zone 6: <100°C)

Collected via: Wet scrubber, acid solution, or water-based capture

Contains:

  • Dissolved ions: Mercury (Hg²⁺), residual Cadmium (Cd²⁺), trace metals
  • Fine suspended particles that escaped earlier zones
  • Residual HCl or other gaseous compounds absorbed into solution
  • Dissolved rare earth or base metal ions (if any carry-over)

Form: Aqueous solution (acidic or neutral) with suspended solids

Value: Low — primarily used for final hazard containment. Can be further processed via precipitation or ion exchange to recover remaining metals, or safely treated and disposed.


Strategic Implications of Corrected Outputs

Separation Achievement:

  • Output 1: Pure refractory metals & carrier rare earths (easy to separate further if needed)
  • Output 2: Precious metals & critical rare earths (high-value stream)
  • Output 3: Base metals & industrial elements (commodity stream)
  • Output 4: Volatile & toxic elements (stabilised, safe, recoverable)
  • Output 5: Ultra-volatiles (specialized recovery)
  • Output 6: Final safety net (hazard elimination)

Environmental Impact:

  • Toxic elements (As, Se, Hg, Cd) transformed from mobile, bioavailable ions → stable, non-leachable oxides
  • No toxic wastewater created — all hazards captured and stabilized
  • Closed-cycle system — zero emissions

Economic Value:

  • Output 1: Highest value per kg (refractory metals, rare earths)
  • Output 2: High value (precious metals, critical REEs)
  • Output 3: Medium value (base metals, industrial elements)
  • Output 4: Medium to High value (volatile metals, but also liability elimination from toxin stabilisation)
  • Output 5: Low value (ultra-volatiles)
  • Output 6: Minimal direct value, but perpetual liability eliminated

This output scheme reveals the true power of UHTP™: simultaneous value recovery AND hazard elimination across multiple feedstock types in a single process.

Why This Matters

This is not just “separation.” This is fractionation at the molecular level. You’re not using chemistry to separate metals — you’re using thermodynamics and physics to separate them as they condense.

This means:

✅ No additional reagents needed — the quench gases are inert or simple (O₂, HCl).
✅ No complex downstream processing — the elements are already partially separated.
✅ No waste streams — every output is captured and useful.
✅ No feedstock limitations — the process works the same way whether your input is ore, e-waste, slag, or tailings.


Real-World Examples — One Platform, Infinite Feedstocks

Example 1: E-Waste Recycling

Feedstock: Circuit boards, solder, connectors (Pb, Sn, Sb, Zn, Rb, Bi, Cu, Ni)

Traditional approach: Mechanical shredding → acid leaching → multiple separation stages → 70–80% recovery + hazardous wastewater

UHTP™ approach:

  • Zone 1: Precious metals (Cu, Ni) condense as metal droplets
  • Zone 2: Base metals (Sn, Pb, Bi) condense as metal droplets
  • Zone 3: Sb oxides condense as particles
  • Zone 4: Zn, Rb stabilized as oxides
  • Zone 6: Final scrubber captures residuals

Result: 95%+ recovery, multiple pure outputs, zero wastewater

Economic impact: E-waste becomes a high-value feedstock instead of a disposal problem.


Example 2: Mining Tailings with Toxic Elements

Feedstock: Tailings from polymetallic mine (Pb, Zn, Cu, As, Se, Sb — low-grade, complex)

Traditional approach: Too low-grade to process → stored in tailings dam → 0% recovery + perpetual environmental liability

UHTP™ approach:

  • Zone 1: Cu condenses as metal droplets
  • Zone 2: Pb/Zn condense as metal droplets
  • Zone 4: As₂O₃, SeO₂ stabilised as non-leachable oxides (no longer toxic)
  • Zone 6: Final scrubber ensures safe closure

Result: Stranded resource becomes revenue stream; toxic hazard eliminated

Economic impact: Tailings shift from $2M/year liability to $15M+/year revenue stream.


Example 3: Spent Catalysts

Feedstock: Spent catalysts (Pt, Pd, Rh precious metals embedded in Al₂O₃, SiO₂ gangue)

Traditional approach: Complex hydrometallurgical leaching → multiple precipitation stages → 85–90% recovery + expensive, slow

UHTP™ approach:

  • Zone 1: Pt/Pd/Rh (high boiling points) condense as pure metal droplets
  • Zone 2: Refractory oxides (Al₂O₃, SiO₂) condense as separate stream

Result: Pure precious metal output + reusable oxide byproduct

Economic impact: Faster recovery, higher purity, lower cost than traditional refining.


Example 4: Mining Slag

Feedstock: Slag from copper smelting (Cu, Fe, Zn, Pb, rare earths — low-concentration, complex)

Traditional approach: Discarded as waste → stored or used for fill → 0% metal recovery

UHTP™ approach:

  • Zone 1: Rare earth oxides (high boiling points) condense as separate stream
  • Zone 2: Cu/Fe/Pb condense as metal droplets
  • Zone 4: Zn captured separately
  • Zone 6: Final scrubber captures residuals

Result: Waste becomes multi-element resource

Economic impact: Billions of tons of stranded slag worldwide becomes economically recoverable.


Why UHTP™ Is Truly Universal

You might be noticing a pattern in these examples. The process is fundamentally the same for all of them.

  • E-waste? Same process.
  • Tailings? Same process.
  • Catalysts? Same process.
  • Slag? Same process.

This is the power of UHTP™. It’s not a specialised process for one ore type or one metal. It’s a universal platform because it operates at a level above the specifics of any particular feed-stock.

Why This Matters for the Industry

  1. Modular Infrastructure
    You don’t need different plants for different ores. One UHTP™ unit can process multiple feed-stocks — just change the quench parameters slightly.
  2. Reduced Capital Cost
    Instead of building separate smelters for copper, lead, zinc, and rare earths, you build one UHTP™ facility.
  3. Supply Chain Flexibility
    If your primary ore supply is disrupted, you can feed alternative feedstocks (e-waste, slag, tailings) into the same equipment.
  4. Circular Economy Integration
    Recycled materials are no longer “second-class” feedstocks. They’re processed identically to primary ore.
  5. Geographic Flexibility
    You can deploy UHTP™ at mine sites, recycling centres, or centralised hubs. The process doesn’t care where the feed-stock comes from.

The Advantages Over Traditional Methods

Let’s be clear about what UHTP™ offers compared to conventional metallurgy:

AspectTraditional SmeltingUHTP™
Feedstock FlexibilityOre-specificUniversal (ore, waste, recycled)
Recovery Rate85–90%95%+
Processing TimeHours to daysSeconds to minutes
Energy IntensitySustained high temp (1,200–1,600°C)Rapid vaporisation + quench
Chemical WasteSlag, off-gases, wastewaterMinimal (closed-cycle)
Capital CostHigh (ore-specific equipment)Lower (modular)
Environmental ImpactEmissions, slag disposal, tailingsNear-zero emissions, total recovery
Operator SkillHigh (process-specific)Lower (universal process)

The Market Opportunity

This isn’t just a technical achievement. It’s a market transformation.

The Problem It Solves

  1. Stranded Resources: Billions of tons of low-grade ore, tailings, and slag contain valuable metals that can’t be economically processed today.
  2. Geopolitical Vulnerability: Rare earths, cobalt, lithium — critical for batteries, electronics, and clean energy — are concentrated in a few countries. UHTP™ enables processing of lower-grade deposits globally.
  3. Circular Economy Gap: Recycled materials are often too complex to process economically. UHTP™ changes that.
  4. Environmental Liability: Mining companies are sitting on decades of environmental liability from tailings. UHTP™ converts liability to asset.
  5. Supply Chain Resilience: Battery makers, EV manufacturers, and electronics companies need secure supply of critical metals. UHTP™ enables distributed, resilient supply.

The Opportunity

  • Mining companies: Turn marginal deposits and tailings into revenue streams.
  • Recyclers: Process complex e-waste profitably.
  • Battery makers: Secure supply of lithium, cobalt, nickel.
  • Rare earth processors: Compete with China by processing lower-grade ores.
  • Investors: Unlock stranded value in existing mining assets.

Your Invitation

If you have a feed-stock that’s complex, low-grade, or considered “uneconomical” to process — whether it’s ore, e-waste, tailings, slag, or spent catalysts — UHTP™ is worth exploring.

The question isn’t whether your feed-stock can be processed. The question is: Can you afford not to?

Every tonne of tailings left in a dam represents:

  • Stranded metal value
  • Environmental liability
  • Missed revenue opportunity

Every shipment of e-waste sent to landfills represents:

  • Lost precious metals
  • Toxic elements not recovered
  • Missed circular economy opportunity

Every batch of slag discarded represents:

  • Wasted copper, zinc, rare earths
  • Energy already spent (now wasted)
  • Missed profit margin

UHTP™ doesn’t just process metals. It redefines what’s economically viable.


Now is the Time for Technology

Metallurgy has been bound by the constraints of traditional smelting for over a century. Different ores required different infrastructure. Complex feed-stocks were abandoned. Waste was stored or discarded. Recycling was marginal.

UHTP™ breaks these constraints.

It’s not an incremental improvement. It’s a new paradigm — one where feedstock complexity is not a liability, but an opportunity. Where waste becomes resource. Where circular economy isn’t aspirational, it’s operational.

The future of metallurgy isn’t mining better ores. It’s transforming any feedstock into pure metals.

And it’s happening now.


Your Next Steps

Do you have a feed-stock that traditional smelters have deemed “uneconomical”?

Let’s talk about how UHTP™ can unlock its value.

Industry Anew with IPRI
Industry Anew with IPRI

For Reference – Mining Elements Ordered by Vaporisation Temperature (Boiling Point)

RANKElementSymbolBoiling Point (°C)Primary UsesCategory
1RheniumRe5,596 °CJet engine superalloys, catalysts, electronicsRefractory Metal
2TungstenW5,555 °CCutting tools, electronics, alloys, X-ray targetsRefractory Metal
3TantalumTa5,458 °CCapacitors (phones, laptops, EVs), surgical implantsCritical Mineral
4OsmiumOs5,027 °CElectrical contacts, instrument pivots, robot jointsPlatinum Group Metal
5ThoriumTh4,788 °CEmerging nuclear fuel (thorium reactors), always NORM in REE oresNuclear/Energy Metal
6NiobiumNb4,744 °CHigh-strength steel alloys, superconductors, EV batteriesCritical Mineral
7MolybdenumMo4,639 °CSteel alloys, electronics, catalysts, lubricantsRefractory Metal
8HafniumHf4,603 °CNuclear reactor control rods, semiconductor chipsCritical Mineral
9ZirconiumZr4,377 °CNuclear reactors, ceramics, refractory materials, alloysCritical Mineral
10RutheniumRu4,150 °CHard disk drives, fuel cells, green hydrogen, electronicsPlatinum Group Metal
11IridiumIr4,130 °CSpark plugs, semiconductors, chloralkali process, OLEDsPlatinum Group Metal
12PlatinumPt3,825 °CCatalytic converters, jewelry, fuel cells, electronicsPlatinum Group Metal
13UraniumU3,818 °CNuclear fuel, medical isotopes (always NORM in REE ores)Nuclear/Energy Metal
14RhodiumRh3,695 °CCatalytic converters, electronics, jewelryPlatinum Group Metal
15LanthanumLa3,464 °CEV batteries (NiMH), optics, catalysts, glass additivesRare Earth Element
16CeriumCe3,443 °CGlass polishing, catalysts, alloys (dominant carrier REE)Rare Earth Element
17VanadiumV3,407 °CSteel alloys, vanadium batteries, aerospace, energy storageCritical Mineral
18YttriumY3,345 °CLEDs, lasers, superconductors, cancer treatment, X-ray tubesRare Earth Element
19TitaniumTi3,287 °CAerospace, medical implants, pigments, high-performance alloysStrategic Metal
20GadoliniumGd3,273 °CMRI contrast agents, nuclear reactors, high-performance magnetsRare Earth Element
21SiliconSi3,265 °CSemiconductors, solar cells, steel production, glassCritical Mineral
22PraseodymiumPr3,130 °CHigh-performance magnets, aircraft engines, fiber opticsRare Earth Element
23TerbiumTb3,123 °CMagnets, Terfenol-D, fluorescent lamps, color TV tubesRare Earth Element
24NeodymiumNd3,074 °CHigh-performance magnets (EV motors, wind turbines), lasersRare Earth Element
25PalladiumPd2,963 °CCatalytic converters, electronics, hydrogen storage, jewelryPlatinum Group Metal
26CobaltCo2,927 °CEV batteries, superalloys, magnets, catalystsCritical Mineral
27NickelNi2,913 °CStainless steel, EV batteries, alloys, catalystsStrategic Metal
28ErbiumEr2,868 °CFiber optic amplifiers, lasers, nuclear reactors, telecommunicationsRare Earth Element
29IronFe2,861 °CSteel, construction, manufacturing, machineryBase Metal
30GoldAu2,856 °CJewelry, electronics, investment, medical devicesPrecious Metal
31ScandiumSc2,836 °CAerospace alloys (Al-Sc), fuel cells, lasers, high-performanceRare Earth Element
32GermaniumGe2,833 °CSemiconductors, fiber optics, solar cells, infrared opticsCritical Mineral
33HolmiumHo2,720 °CMedical lasers, magnets, fission energy, researchRare Earth Element
34ChromiumCr2,671 °CStainless steel, plating, pigments, alloysStrategic Metal
35TinSn2,602 °CSolder, coatings, alloys, food packagingBase Metal
36DysprosiumDy2,567 °CMagnets, data storage, control rods, aerospaceRare Earth Element
37CopperCu2,562 °CElectrical wiring, plumbing, alloys, electronics, renewable energyBase Metal
38AluminumAl2,519 °CConstruction, aerospace, packaging, EVs, most widely used non-ferrous metalBase Metal
39BerylliumBe2,469 °CAerospace alloys, nuclear reactors, X-ray equipment, electronicsStrategic Metal
40GalliumGa2,229 °CSemiconductors, LEDs, solar cells, integrated circuitsCritical Mineral
41SilverAg2,162 °CElectronics, jewelry, photography, solar cells, medical devicesPrecious Metal
42IndiumIn2,072 °CLCD screens, solar cells, semiconductors, transparent conductorsCritical Mineral
43ManganeseMn2,061 °CSteel production, batteries, alloys, water purificationBase Metal
44BariumBa1,845 °CDrilling fluids, glass, electronics, medical imagingIndustrial Metal
45LeadPb1,749 °CBatteries, radiation shielding, alloys, cable sheathingBase Metal
46AntimonySb1,587 °CFlame retardants, batteries, alloys, semiconductorsToxic Element
47BismuthBi1,564 °CPharmaceuticals, cosmetics, alloys, electronicsToxic Element
48CalciumCa1,484 °CConstruction, metallurgy, chemicals, pharmaceuticalsIndustrial Metal
49ThalliumTl1,473 °CElectronics, infrared optics, medical imaging (highly toxic)Toxic Element
50StrontiumSr1,382 °CFerrite magnets, fireworks, medical imaging, ceramicsIndustrial Metal
51LithiumLi1,342 °CBatteries (EV, grid storage), ceramics, glass, pharmaceuticalsCritical Mineral
52MagnesiumMg1,091 °CLightweight alloys, aerospace, batteries, desalinationStrategic Metal
53TelluriumTe988 °CSolar cells, thermoelectrics, alloys, semiconductorsCritical Mineral
54ZincZn907 °CGalvanizing, batteries, alloys, pharmaceuticalsBase Metal
55ArsenicAs887 °CSemiconductors, glass, wood preservatives, pesticidesToxic Element
56SodiumNa883 °CChemicals, glass, metallurgy, food processingIndustrial Metal
57CadmiumCd767 °CBatteries (NiCd), coatings, pigments, semiconductorsToxic Element
58PotassiumK759 °CFertilizers, chemicals, batteries, pharmaceuticalsIndustrial Metal
59RubidiumRb688 °CElectronics, specialty glass, research, atomic clocksRare Alkali Metal
60SeleniumSe685 °CSolar cells, glass, electronics, pharmaceuticals, dietary supplementsToxic Element
61CesiumCs671 °CAtomic clocks, oil drilling, space propulsion, medical imagingRare Alkali Metal
62SulfurS445 °CFertilizers, chemicals, rubber vulcanization, batteriesIndustrial Mineral
63MercuryHg357 °CElectronics, instruments, gold extraction, medical devicesToxic Element

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