Sponsor:
Department of Energy (DOE),Department of Energy (DOE)
Award Title:
Critical Minerals and Materials Accelerator (DE-FOA-0003589)
Amount:
$3M
UM Deadline:
04/16/2026
Sponsor Deadline:
04/21/2026
Description:
The Critical Minerals and Materials (CMM) Accelerator program is an initiative from the U.S. Department of Energy to strengthen domestic CMM supply chains. This Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO), issued by the Advanced Materials and Manufacturing Technologies Office (AMMTO) and the Office of Geothermal (OG), provides up to $69 million to directly address the national imperative to secure a reliable, predictable, and affordable domestic supply of CMMs which are foundational to U.S. energy dominance, national security, and industrial competitiveness.
The CMM Accelerator program targets innovative CMM production technologies that have demonstrated promising results at the bench scale (Technology Readiness Level 3-4) but require further development to achieve commercial viability. A significant challenge lies in advancing these laboratory-scale innovations beyond the "valley of death" to industrially relevant scales. This NOFO is designed to overcome this barrier by funding collaborative industry partnerships for prototyping and small-scale piloting of these critical processes and materials. Over a decade of DOE funding has laid the groundwork, and this program builds upon that to validate technologies and establish the confidence needed for substantial follow-on investment.
The primary goals are to foster industry partnerships, validate technologies for material optimization and cost-competitive production, enable informed decisions through rigorous analysis, and accelerate domestic CMM manufacturing capabilities. The NOFO includes three key Topic Areas: (1) recovery and production of critical materials from secondary sources such as post-industrial scrap and e-waste; (2) processes to refine and alloy gallium, gallium nitride, germanium, and silicon carbide for semiconductor applications; and (3) technologies for cost-competitive direct lithium extraction, separation, and processing. Projects are expected to mature technologies to Technology Readiness Levels 6 (TRL 6), demonstrating economic viability, material efficiency, and reduced reliance on external CMM sources. Projects must also significantly reduce adoption readiness risks, meaning they should address non-technical barriers such as market acceptance, resource availability, supply chain integration, cost-effectiveness, and regulatory hurdles to ensure these technologies can be successfully integrated and utilized commercially.
Number of Applicants University is Allowed to submit:
Multiple
Additional Requirements:
Letter of Intent
Sponsor Guidelines:
UM Nominations Process:
Given the short timeline leading up to the required LOI, this is a first-come, first-served funding opportunity.
The University of Minnesota is eligible to submit 5 proposals from each UMN Campus with its own UEI (Twin Cities + Morris, Crookston, Duluth, and Rochester): 1 across all subtopics of Topic Area 1; 1 across all subtopics of Topic Area 2; and 1 each in subtopics 3A, 3B and 3C.
NOMINEES, as of 4/21/2026:
DULUTH The official nominees for Topic Area 1 and Topic Area 2 have been selected.
Spots remain for other campuses and focus areas unless otherwise listed above. Contact collabor@umn.edu for more information.
Peer Review Coordination:
Research and Innovation Office
contact email
Status:
No longer accepting applications.
Please note:
To be considered for peer review and internal selection, faculty must follow the above submission guidelines and meet the UM deadline as set by the office coordinating the peer review for this opportunity.