Title of article
Reducing energy-related CO2 emissions using accelerated weathering of limestone
Author/Authors
Greg H. Rau، نويسنده , , Kevin G. Knauss، نويسنده , , William H. Langer، نويسنده , , Ken Caldeira، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages
7
From page
1471
To page
1477
Abstract
The use and impacts of accelerated weathering of limestone (AWL; reaction: CO2+H2O+CaCO3-Ca2++2(HCO3
) is explored as a
CO2 capture and sequestration method. It is shown that significant limestone resources are relatively close to a majority of CO2-emitting
power plants along the coastal US, a favored siting location for AWL. Waste fines, representing more than 20% of current US crushed
limestone production (4109 tonnes/yr), could provide an inexpensive or free source of AWL carbonate. With limestone transportation
then as the dominant cost variable, CO2 mitigation costs of $3-$4/tonne appear to be possible in certain locations. Perhaps 10–20% of
US point–source CO2 emissions could be mitigated in this fashion. It is experimentally shown that CO2 sequestration rates of 10 6 to
10 5 moles/sec perm2 of limestone surface area are achievable, with reaction densities on the order of 10 2 tonnes CO2 m 3day 1, highly
dependent on limestone particle size, solution turbulence and flow, and CO2 concentration. Modeling shows that AWL would allow
carbon storage in the ocean with significantly reduced impacts to seawater pH relative to direct CO2 disposal into the atmosphere or sea.
The addition of AWL-derived alkalinity to the ocean may itself be beneficial for marine biota.
Keywords
Storage , Limestone , ocean , sequestration , mitigation , power plant , CO2 , capture
Journal title
Energy
Serial Year
2007
Journal title
Energy
Record number
417130
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