This role ensures technical excellence, regulatory alignment, and scientific rigor for projects supporting U.S. rare earth supply chain resilience and domestic critical mineral independence. The REE SME also interfaces with Government stakeholders, research partners, and industry collaborators to validate technologies and de-risk emerging REE processes from TRL 2–7. This is a remote position.
Serve as the primary authority on rare earth elements, critical minerals, and associated supply chains, including extraction, processing, separation, and end-use applications.
Evaluate and guide advanced REE technologies across the full lifecycle:
Geological resource characterization
Mineral processing (crushing, grinding, flotation, gravity, magnetic separation)
Hydrometallurgical and solvent extraction systems
Ion exchange, membrane systems, electrowinning, precipitation
Purification and separation of individual REEs
Metallization and alloy production
REE recycling from e-waste, magnets, and industrial byproducts
Provide scientific oversight for TRL 2–6 R&D projects, ensuring clear TRL advancement pathways.
Develop and review technical deliverables, white papers, and DOE-required documentation.
Provide expertise on REE geological formations—including carbonatites, ion-adsorption clays, monazite, bastnaesite, phosphates, and coal byproducts.
Support design, interpretation, and optimization of:
Geochemical assays
Geophysical surveys (EM, magnetics, radiometrics)
Borehole logging
Ore characterization and mineralogy studies
Translate resource data into volumetric assessments, mine planning inputs, and processing flowsheets.
Lead technical design and optimization of REE processing flowsheets, including material balances, mass/energy calculations, and separation efficiency modeling.
Evaluate equipment selection, reagent chemistry, and process control strategies.
Provide techno-economic analysis inputs (TEA), including CAPEX/OPEX assumptions for separation and refining steps.
Ensure compliance with environmental standards related to REE mining and processing, including waste management, tailings, emissions, and radiation safety.
Guide sustainability practices such as:
Reduced energy and reagent consumption
Waste minimization and co-product recovery
Water efficiency and treatment technologies
Environmental monitoring and permitting strategies
Support pilot- and field-scale demonstrations of REE extraction, beneficiation, and processing technologies.
Oversee sampling, pilot plant operations, and analytical validation activities.
Assist in integration of automation, robotics, and real-time sensing technologies into REE operations.
Work with DOE, DoD, USGS, NIST, and other federal programs on critical mineral research and policy.
Provide strategic input to project partners, industry operators, and academic institutions.
Contribute to consortiums, workshops, technical forums, and stakeholder meetings.
Provide domain expertise in support of federal proposals, including DOE FOAs, DoD R&D solicitations, and USGS critical minerals programs.
Shape R&D strategies, teaming approaches, and innovation pathways for REE projects.
Review proposal technical volumes, management plans, schedules, and SOPO language.
Master’s or PhD in Metallurgy, Mining Engineering, Materials Science, Geochemistry, Geology, Chemical Engineering, or a related discipline.
10+ years of experience in REE or critical mineral extraction, separation, processing, or manufacturing.
Deep knowledge of mineralogy, processing technologies, hydrometallurgy, and REE refining flowsheets.
Proven experience supporting federal R&D, pilot plant demonstrations, or advanced commercialization activities.
Strong technical writing ability for scientific reports and federal deliverables.
Experience with DOE, DoD, DARPA, ARPA-E, NETL, USGS, or NSF programs.
Experience operating or designing pilot plants, metallurgical labs, or mining testbeds.
Expertise in unconventional REE resources (coal ash, acid mine drainage, industrial byproducts).
Experience with AI/ML-enabled mineral characterization or advanced sensing systems.
Familiarity with U.S. critical mineral policy, supply chain risks, and international market dynamics.
Strong analytical and systems-thinking abilities.
Ability to translate complex scientific concepts into clear recommendations.
Effective communication with technical, non-technical, and government stakeholders.
Leadership in multidisciplinary environments and research consortia.
Commitment to safety, sustainability, and scientific integrity.
Hybrid work environment with potential travel to mine sites, proving grounds, pilot facilities, academic labs, and federal meetings.
Ability to work around industrial equipment and in outdoor field settings as required.
Must comply with all applicable safety and environmental protocols.