Scandium Canada Advances Commercialization of Aluminum-Scandium Alloys Through Multiple Development Initiatives
February 11th, 2026 2:55 PM
By: Newsworthy Staff
Scandium Canada is progressing industrial adoption of its proprietary aluminum-scandium alloys through wire prototyping, collaborations, and research partnerships, potentially creating new markets for scandium oxide while addressing technical challenges in additive manufacturing and welding.

Scandium Canada Ltd. has provided an update on its Scandium+ division's efforts to advance industrial adoption of proprietary aluminum-scandium alloys. The company commissioned the Centre de Metallurgie du Quebec to produce wires using two proprietary Al-Sc alloy formulations for welding and Wire Additive Advanced Manufacturing trials, with work expected to complete by March 2026 and prototypes submitted for third-party end-user testing. This initiative is supported by grants from the CQRDA, of which the company is a member. The company estimates these applications could generate demand for up to 30 tonnes annually of scandium oxide, addressing a market segment that currently doesn't exist, with these applications resulting from findings in the Productique Quebec study announced in October 2025.
Following a Memorandum of Understanding signed with Gränges Powder Metallurgy in November 2025, current efforts focus on trialing Scandium Canada's modified AA535 and AA7075 alloys into GPM's product offerings. GPM, a wholly owned subsidiary of global aluminum technology company Gränges, is a global supplier of sprayformed aluminum products and aluminum powders for additive manufacturing. Through in-kind support from Canada's Industrial Research Assistance Program, Scandium Canada received a technical report from experts at the National Research Council of Canada's Additive Manufacturing Division to identify materials qualification strategies for adopting its alloys in space, aerospace, and defense applications.
Building on the Productique Quebec report completed in fall 2025, which identified 13 target applications including welding wires, aircraft ducting, and heat exchangers, Scandium Canada is expanding outreach to industrial end users across aerospace, automotive, advanced manufacturing, and 3D printing segments. The company's two proprietary alloys and their fabrication method, developed with McMaster University, are protected by an international patent application filed under the Patent Cooperation Treaty on September 17, 2025, building on an initial provisional patent application filed with the USPTO in September 2024. This intellectual property is wholly owned by Scandium Canada Ltd. and strategically positions the company for global commercial applications.
Technical results reported in September 2025 showed the company's modified AA535 and AA7075 alloys offer a practical solution to eliminating micro-cracking in high-strength aluminum alloys during laser powder-bed fusion processing, with implications for aluminum welding and WAAM suitability. Key attributes include reduced scandium content while maintaining grain-refining effect, broad processing window with relative densities above 99%, ultimate tensile strengths of approximately 330 to 380 MPa in as-built state with 17–25% increases after heat treatment, and minimized defect density through proprietary blending procedures. Dr. Luc Duchesne, Head of Scandium+ division and Chief Science Officer, commented that the company aims to find shortest pathways for commercialization through co-development opportunities with industrial users and increasing understanding of alloy properties to meet specific technical requirements. CEO Guy Bourassa added that confirmation of commercial acceptance is an important milestone for the Crater Lake project development, as it will confirm markets, volumes, and pricing to support the financial model of the pre-feasibility study due in June 2026.
Source Statement
This news article relied primarily on a press release disributed by NewMediaWire. You can read the source press release here,
