BeTc2Rh
ceramic· JVASP-71054· BeTc2Rh
BeTc2Rh is an intermetallic ceramic compound combining beryllium, technetium, and rhodium—a research-phase material explored for high-stiffness, high-density applications in advanced structural ceramics. While not yet commercialized at scale, this compound belongs to the family of refractory intermetallics of interest for extreme-environment engineering where conventional ceramics or metals reach performance limits. Its potential lies in aerospace and nuclear applications where thermal stability, hardness, and elastic stiffness are critical, though practical deployment remains limited by material brittleness, cost of constituent elements, and manufacturing complexity typical of multi-element ceramics.
aerospace structural componentshigh-temperature refractory applicationsnuclear reactor materials (research)advanced bearing or sliding surfacesstiffness-critical high-performance parts
Compliance & Regulations
?Conflict Free?RoHS?REACH?TSCA?Prop 65
| Property | Value | Unit | Conditions | Source | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bulk Modulus(K) | — | ksi | — | — | |
Poisson's Ratio(ν) | — | - | — | — | |
Shear Modulus(G) | — | ksi | — | — |
Verified Unverified Low confidence (<80%) Link to source
| Property | Value | Unit | Conditions | Source | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Density(ρ) | — | lb/in³ | — | — |
Verified Unverified Low confidence (<80%) Link to source
| Property | Value | Unit | Conditions | Source | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Band Gap(Eg) | — | eV | — | — | |
Magnetic Moment(μB) | — | µB | — | — |
Verified Unverified Low confidence (<80%) Link to source
| Property | Value | Unit | Conditions | Source | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Energy Above Hull(ΔEhull) | — | eV/atom | — | — | |
Formation Energy(ΔHf) | — | eV/atom | — | — |
Verified Unverified Low confidence (<80%) Link to source
Regulatory Screening
Environmental
RoHS, REACH, and Prop 65 statuses are validated against official substance lists (ECHA SVHC Candidate List, OEHHA Prop 65, RoHS Annex II). Other regulations are estimated from composition and material classification. All screening is a starting point for due diligence — always verify with your supplier before making compliance decisions.