By straw we are referring to the stalks of agricultural plants, wheat stalks 
and corn stover.  The water and nutrients were expended to grow the grain.  
Straw has a low nutrient content (C/N = ca 50/1).  Presently straw is wasted by 
allowing it to decay on the soil surface (only 14% or less of the straw carbon 
is incorporated into the soil).

A variety of processes are available to get energy out of crop residues, but 
they are limited by the poor specific energy of biomass.  Our focus is how to 
efficiently remove Pg amounts of carbon from the atmosphere and permanently 
sequester it in the least environmentally harmful manner.

  = Stuart =

Stuart E. Strand
167 Wilcox Hall, Box 352700, Univ. Washington, Seattle, WA 98195
voice 206-543-5350, fax 206-685-3836
skype:  stuartestrand
http://faculty.washington.edu/sstrand/

Using only muscle power,  who is the fastest person in the world?
Flying start, 200 m  82.3 mph! http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sam_Whittingham
Hour                    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hour_record
  55 miles, upside down, backwards, and head first!

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] 
On Behalf Of [email protected]
Sent: Wednesday, January 28, 2009 7:16 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [geo] Re: Crop residue ocean permanent sequestration

Stuart,

Why bundle and stash terrestrial straw.  Growing straw requires substantial 
fresh water and nutrients.  You could bundle and stash algae instead.  How 
about sargassum or kelp?  A macro-algae can be bundled in large mesh "tea bags" 
with much of the water being squeezed out during the bundling process.

Then, as long as you've got bundles of biomass, why not separate the nutrients 
from the carbon before you stash the carbon?  That way, you can recycle the 
nutrients back to the ocean surface for growing more biomass.  High-pressure 
anaerobic digestion will release the carbon in two separate streams; one 
gaseous CH4, one dissolved CO2, which easily converts to liquid CO2 at typical 
ocean temperatures and pressures.

Would you or others be interested in a California Energy Commission grant to 
run a few bench experiments on high-pressure anaerobic digestion?  I can send a 
draft 
abstract.<http://social.telematicsupdate.com/content/dynamic-carpooling-your-mobile>
 <http://social.telematicsupdate.com/content/dynamic-carpooling-your-mobile>

Mark E. Capron, PE
Oxnard, California
www.PODenergy.org<http://www.podenergy.org/>



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