SBIR-STTR Award

A New Molten-Oxide Electrochemical Process for Producing Primary Iron and Ferrochromium
Award last edited on: 5/18/2021

Sponsored Program
SBIR
Awarding Agency
NSF
Total Award Amount
$746,978
Award Phase
2
Solicitation Topic Code
BC
Principal Investigator
Matthew Humbert

Company Information

Boston Metal (AKA: Boston Electrometallurgical Corporation)

6 Gill Street Unit A
Woburn, MA 01801
   (781) 281-7657
   info@bostonelectromet.com
   www.bostonelectromet.com
Location: Single
Congr. District: 05
County: Middlesex

Phase I

Contract Number: 1345571
Start Date: 1/1/2014    Completed: 12/31/2014
Phase I year
2014
Phase I Amount
$150,000
This Small Business Innovation Research Phase I project will focus on developing a cheaper, more energy efficient route to production of important metals including iron and ferrochromium. Economical separation of these metals from their ores by molten oxide electrolysis (MOE) is enabled by the recent invention of an inert anode material. The essential next step in understanding the behavior of the new inert anode in MOE is longer-duration testing than was possible in the laboratory cell. This test can only be achieved at a larger scale. Achieving this scale-up requires the generation, refinement, and validation of new models. The results of this Phase I project will accelerate innovation in MOE; in addition to the technical objectives in of this proposal, the tools and knowledge created will be applicable to faster screening of new target alloys, faster modifications to the MOE cells, and better definition of the requirements of flexible MOE reactors. The broader impact / commercial potential of this project is to advance the state of knowledge and industrial practice toward cleaner, cheaper, greener steel and stainless steel. Molten oxide electrolysis with an inert anode has been demonstrated at the laboratory scale to produce low-carbon iron and ferroalloys, which are the basis of many high-performance steels. The current low-carbon metals sell at a premium. Published cost models show that both the capital and operating cost of MOE will be lower than competing technologies already in the marketplace. Furthermore, MOE can reduce the environmental impact of primary metallurgy with today?s electricity, and produce even greater gains with renewable energy. In summary, MOE will produce primary metals of higher quality at a lower cost and with lower environmental impact than current methods.

Phase II

Contract Number: 1534664
Start Date: 9/15/2015    Completed: 8/31/2017
Phase II year
2015
(last award dollars: 2017)
Phase II Amount
$596,978

The broader impact / commercial potential of this Small Business Innovation Research Phase II project is to advance the state of knowledge and industrial practice toward cleaner, cheaper, greener steel and stainless steel. The project will focus on the production of iron, part of a $1.1 trillion annual market worldwide, and ferrochromium, a $2.2 billion worldwide annual market. Molten oxide electrolysis with an inert anode has been demonstrated at the laboratory scale to produce low-carbon iron and ferroalloys, which are the basis of many high-performance steels. The current low-carbon metals sell at a premium. Published cost models show that both the capital and operating cost of MOE will be lower than competing technologies already in the marketplace. MOE can also reduce the environmental impact of producing these metals, even with today's electricity, and can produce even greater improvements with renewable energy. In summary, MOE will produce primary metals of higher quality at a lower cost and with lower environmental impact than current methods.The objective of this Phase II research project is to develop a cheaper, more energy efficient route to production of important metals including iron and ferrochromium. Economical separation of these metals from their ores by molten oxide electrolysis (MOE) is enabled by the recent invention of an inert anode material. The essential next step in understanding the behavior of the new inert anode in MOE is longer-duration testing than was possible in the laboratory cell. This test can only be achieved at a larger scale. The models and testing on surrogate systems in Phase I have shown the way to provide this long-duration testing in Phase II. These tests will point the way toward industrial-scale production of iron and ferrochromium by MOE.