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What is Dysprosium?

Posted: Mon Aug 25, 2025 3:46 pm
by admin
What is Dysprosium?

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Dysprosium (Dy) is a soft, silvery-white, rare-earth metal of the lanthanide series with atomic number 66. Named for its "hard to obtain" nature, it is a key component in high-performance neodymium-iron-boron (NdFeB) magnetsused in electric vehicles and wind turbines to prevent magnetism loss at high temperatures. It also functions in nuclear reactors as a neutron absorber and in other technologies like computer hard drives and laser materials.
 
Key Properties 
  • Reactivity: Slowly oxidizes in air and is dissolved by acids.
  • Discovery: Discovered in 1886 by the French chemist Paul-Émile Lecoq de Boisbaudran.
  • Appearance: A bright, metallic silver luster.
  • Physical state: Soft enough to be cut with a knife.
Primary Uses
  • Magnets:
    Essential for the performance of NdFeB magnets, especially their high-temperature stability, which is crucial for electric motors in EVs and wind turbine generators. 
  • Nuclear Reactors:
    Its ability to capture neutrons makes it useful in nuclear fuel rods to control reactions. 
  • Electronics:
    Used in computer hard drives, electronic equipment, and components for laser materials. 
  • Other Applications:
    Found in oil-refining catalysts and infrared beam devices when mixed with other elements. 
Production & Supply 
  • Dysprosium is mined from minerals like monazite and is extracted through processes like ion exchange.
  • China has historically dominated production, though other regions are working to secure stable, non-Chinese supplies, notes the Minor Metals Trade Association.