Poster's note : This is a plain English version of the paper posted a few
minutes ago.

http://www.nanowerk.com/news2/green/newsid=30604.php

Posted: May 22nd, 2013

Carbon capture: Making use of minerals

Removing excess carbon dioxide (CO2) from the atmosphere may be essential
to curb severe climate change. Possible, but expensive, methods include
burying the gas underground between rock layers or ‘scrubbing’ the CO2 in
power station cooling towers before it is released.Rapid mineral
carbonization of CO2, using recyclable ammonium sulfates to extract
magnesium from serpentine rock, produces magnesites and iron oxides, which
have uses in industry.James Highfield at A*STAR’s Institute of Chemical and
Engineering Sciences, together with co-workers at the National Junior
College of Singapore and Åbo Akademi University in Finland, has now
described a cheaper and more permanent solution that would prevent the
CO2 escaping back into the atmosphere ("Activation of serpentine for
CO2 mineralization by flux extraction of soluble magnesium salts using
ammonium sulfate" and "Mechanochemical processing of serpentine with
ammonium salts under ambient conditions for CO2 mineralization").Their work
focused on using carbon mineralization, a process that involves a reaction
between CO2 and minerals, such as magnesium silicates, to form solid
carbonates. Mineralization occurs naturally between the atmosphere and
rocks, and the carbonates remain geologically stable for millions of years.
Crucially, plentiful raw materials would be available to conduct this type
of CO2 removal on a vast scale.Natural carbon mineralization is very slow,
so scientists are working to accelerate the process in an energy-efficient
and carbon-neutral way. Using ammonium salts and magnesium-silicate-rich
serpentine rocks, Highfield and co-workers induced rapid carbon
mineralization. They also found that milling the solids could convert
serpentine directly into stable carbonate.To accelerate the extraction of
magnesium (as soluble sulfate) from serpentine, the researchers used
ammonium sulfate. This reaction generates by-products such as iron oxide
that may be useful for the steel industry. They trapped the leftover
ammonia in water, and recycled this by-product in an aqueous wash with the
magnesium solution to produce a mineral form of magnesium hydroxide called
brucite. Finally, the researchers carbonated the brucite in a pressurized
reactor. The heat generated by this exothermic process was recycled to help
power the initial magnesium extraction.A key aim throughout the processing
was to recycle as much ammonium sulfate as possible. The final products,
magnesites (magnesium carbonates), could also be useful. “Magnesites are
commodities in their own right as smoke- and fire-retardants, and have
potential for heavy-metal ion sequestration,” the team notes.Highfield and
co-workers discovered that the yield of recycled ammonium sulfate drops
considerably at temperatures of 400–450 °C, although reactions at these
temperatures produce the most brucite. They suggest that this may be
rectified by either increasing the humidity during the process or
performing the reaction at a lower temperature to extract an alternative
mineral to brucite.“By virtue of their rich chemistry with magnesium,
ammonium salts are likely to become ubiquitous in the field of
CO2 mineralization,” the team says.Source: A*STAR

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