Titanium: The Metal of the Future
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Titanium: The Metal of the Future

Jan 16, 2024

Titanium is a popular metal, but are we harnessing its true potential or merely scratching the surface?

Despite having superior properties when compared to stainless steel and aluminum, titanium is produced and used on a relatively small scale. Its current applications are highly specialized, ranging from aircraft turbine engines to medical implants and military vehicles.This infographic sponsored by IperionX explores titanium's growth markets and potential for mainstream application in the future.

Titanium's high cost limits its applications and scale of production.

In fact, global titanium metal production is less than 1% of aluminum and steel production.

Titanium is expensive because it is still processed and refined using the 80-year-old Kroll process. Invented by metallurgist William Kroll in 1940, the Kroll process is complex, energy-intensive, and carbon-intensive.

While titanium produced using the Kroll process is uneconomical for large-scale uses, cost-competitive and sustainably-produced titanium could kickstart a new Titanium Age.

Titanium has untapped growth potential in many markets, but four industries stand out:

Titanium is as strong as steel and 45% lighter, and twice as strong as aluminum. However, it has not achieved its potential because of high production costs.

With cost-competitive production, titanium has the potential to substitute stainless steel and aluminum, making many products stronger and/or lighter.

IperionX is a U.S. metals technology company developing the world's first 100% recycled, low-cost, low-carbon titanium supply chain. Click here to learn more now.

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Titanium: The Metal of the Future Titanium Production vs. Stainless Steel and Aluminum The Growth Markets for Titanium Aerospace: $1 trillion Consumer Electronics: Electric Vehicles: Luxury Goods: Dawn of the Titanium Age 45% twice as strong Titanium 101 Series