The Bolzano process is a means to reduce magnesium to metallic form.[1][2][3][4][5] "Dolomite-ferrosilicon briquettes are stacked on a special charge support system through which internal electric heating is conducted to the charge. A complete reaction takes 20 to 24 hours at 1,200 °C."[6]
In 2014, Brazilian operations produced 10-15 kilotons of Mg by this process.[7]
Also in 2014, Nevada Clean Magnesium announced its Tami-Mosi plan to create a ASTM B-92 pilot plant. The mineral resource is estimated at 412 billion tons of 12.3% grade Mg.[8] The company produced its first ingot from a pilot plant in December 2018.[9]
^Buğdayci, Mehmet; Turan, Ahmet; Alkan, Murat; Yücel, Onuralp (2019). "Magnesium Production from Calcined Dolomite via the Pidgeon Process". Magnesium and Its Alloys. pp. 47–56. doi:10.1201/9781351045476-3. ISBN9781351045476. S2CID202216899.