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HOW CAN WE REDUCE CONCRETE’S HEFTY CARBON FOOTPRINT?

Bit by bit, innovators are chipping away at this ubiquitous material’s
environmental downsides

WRITER: Nate Berg
@Nate_BergCities, science and design writer

April 13, 2016 — A roomful of materials scientists, gathered at UCLA for a
recent conference on “grand challenges in construction materials,” slowly
passed a brick-size white block around the room. They held in their hands,
briefly, part of the solution to one of those grand challenges. The white
block, rock solid and surprisingly lightweight, was a new alternative to
cement, the glue that holds together aggregate, or crushed rock, to make
the world’s most ubiquitous building material: concrete.

Production of cement — and by extension, concrete — has a large
environmental footprint, mostly due to the huge amount of energy it takes
to heat limestone, cement’s key ingredient. The process of creating cement
emits upwards of 80 percent of the cement’s weight in carbon dioxide and
accounts for about 5 percent of human-generated CO2 emissions annually.
Though the white block’s production still requires some of the CO2-emitting
fuel use of typical cement making, CO2 is also one of the ingredients used
to create it. About one-third CO2 by mass, the cementlike substance reduces
its carbon footprint by sequestering CO2 inside the finished product.

Concrete, and the cement that binds it, is themost widely used material in
the world, and its usage is on the rise. From 2011 through 2013, China
used more than 6.5 billion metric tons (7.2 billion tons) of cement — more
than the U.S. used in the entire 20th century. Between 2006 and 2050,
global production of cement is expected to increaseto between 3.7 billion
metric tons (4.1 billion tons) and about 4.4 billion metric tons (4.9
billion tons) a year. Since concrete’s not going away, reducing the carbon
intensity of its production is becoming a global imperative. New
technologies and approaches are being developed to cut down on concrete’s
environmental downsides — everything from utilizing industrial by-products
to reduce cement usage, to recycling existing concrete, to
producing self-healing concretes that reduce the need for new concrete, to
creating entirely new materials.

But no perfect solution exists. That yet-unnamed white block is not
completely carbon-negative nor can it replace typical cement completely,
explains Fredrik P. Glasser, a professor at the University of Aberdeen in
Scotland who is part of the team that developed the cement alternative. In
this case limestone is replaced with waste CO2 and magnesium from a cement
production facility and a desalination plant in Qatar, but carbon-emitting
high heats are still required. Glasser says it’s less about replacing
cement than reusing the large quantities of CO2 it produces. “The emphasis
has to be on taking that CO2 and making useful products from it,” he says.
The material he’s helping develop is still a few years away from market,
but it’s proving in tests to be a viable replacement for some concrete and
insulation in building projects. His goal isn’t to compete with cement, but
to “eat away at the edges” of what it’s currently being used for, shaving
down the global need for cement and the carbon emissions it produces.

Researchers and businesses all over the world are trying to find other ways
to carve niches into this market — by developing novel material approaches
or simply making concrete less environmentally harmful.

The Canadian company CarbonCure Technologies has developed a process that
injects waste CO2 into a typical concrete production process, effectively
replacing a small amount of cement with CO2 without compromising the
concrete’s strength or integrity. Once in the mix, the CO2 changes into
calcium carbonate, the chemical equivalent of the limestone used in the
production of conventional cement. Four concrete producers in North America
have started using CarbonCure’s technology, including Argos in Atlanta
and Vulcan in Springfield, Virginia, and about a dozen more are negotiating
licenses, according to Sean Monkman, the company’s vice president of
technology development. One user, over the course of a single week after
the technology was installed, saw its CO2emissions drop from 124.5 metric
tons (137 tons) to 119 metric tons (131 tons) by replacing some of the
carbon-intensive cement in the concrete mix with waste CO2, Monkman says.

CarbonCure’s technology is a small retrofit to the concrete production
process — just a computer system, a tank of waste CO2 and a tube that can
pump that CO2 into the concrete mix. “It’s simple. It doesn’t require any
huge change in the way things are normally operated,” Monkman says. “For a
conservative industry like concrete, it’s got to be simple if people are
going to want to do it.”

Change is slow, many in the industry concede, which has made it challenging
for new material approaches to catch on. And though typical cement has a
high carbon footprint, there’s still no cheaper option.

Researchers at the University of Notre Dame are looking to reduce the
environmental toll of concrete by recycling waste concrete for use in
construction beams. Here former Ph.D. student and current engineer Adam
Knaack prepares beams with recycled concrete aggregates for testing. Photo
courtesy of Adam Knaack

Yet another way to reduce the carbon footprint of concrete is to recycle
it. Researchers at the University of Notre Dame are developing a
cost-effective method by which producers of precast concrete — concrete
formed into a mold and brought to building sites — can
effectively recycle their waste concrete into aggregate and reuse it in the
production of construction beams. Engineering professor Yahya Kurama, who’s
leading this research, says the environmental toll of mining the aggregate
used to make concrete — often from riverbeds and mountaintops — has been
largely ignored. “You’re not only destroying the environment but you’re
spending the energy to dig that material out, and then you have to
transport it,” he says. By reducing the amount of virgin aggregate they
mine, concrete companies can cut both environmental impacts and costs.

Another approach to reducing the need for new concrete is the advent of
self-healing concrete — concrete mixes augmented with various polymers,
bacteria and healing agents that can automatically respond to cracks.
Researchers in the United Kingdom are currently testing out a number
ofexperimental self-healing concretes, including one embedded with tiny
capsules that open when the concrete cracks and form new solid calcium
carbonate.

None of these approaches on its own will erase the environmental impact of
concrete. But the more alternatives there are, the more sustainable the
industry can be.

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