https://www.technologyreview.com/s/601490/go-inside-an-industrial-plant-that-sucks-carbon-dioxide-straight-out-of-the-air/

Go Inside an Industrial Plant That Sucks Carbon Dioxide Straight Out of the
Air

A pilot plant north of Vancouver is testing a process to capture carbon
dioxide from the atmosphere, hoping to prove it is economically viable.

by Peter Fairley June 6, 2016

Carbon dioxide emissions must decrease to nearly zero by 2040 if global
warming by the end of this century is to be held to 2 °C. But we may well
miss that target. A pilot plant started up last fall at Squamish, British
Columbia, is testing a backup plan: sucking carbon dioxide directly out of
the air.

Capturing ambient carbon dioxide is a tall order because, for all the
trouble it causes, the greenhouse gas makes up just 0.04 percent of the air
we breathe. The Squamish plant can capture one ton of carbon dioxide a day.
Significantly reducing atmospheric carbon dioxide levels would require
thousands of far larger facilities, each sucking millions of tons of carbon
per year out of the air.

Carbon Engineering CEO Adrian Corless

The plant is the brainchild of Calgary-based Carbon Engineering and its
founder, Harvard University physicist David Keith. While some scientists
have estimated that direct air capture would cost $400 to $1,000 per ton of
carbon dioxide, Keith projects that large plants could do it for about $100
per ton.

“We’ve taken existing pieces of industrial equipment and thought about new
chemistries to run through them,” says Adrian Corless, Carbon Engineering’s
CEO. The company captures carbon dioxide in a refashioned cooling tower
flowing with an alkali solution that reacts with acidic carbon dioxide.
That yields dissolved carbon molecules that are then converted to pellets
in equipment created to extract minerals in water treatment plants. And the
plant can turn those carbonate solids into pure carbon dioxide gas for sale
by heating them in a modified cement kiln.

In May the company closed on $8 million of new financing in Canadian
dollars ($6.2 million in U.S. dollars) from investors including Bill Gates.
Keith also hopes to start winning over skeptics. “Most people in the energy
expert space think that air capture is not particularly credible,” he says.
“There won’t be incentives and funding in a serious way for these
technologies unless people believe that they actually work.”

Carbon dioxide is captured within the plant’s gas-liquid contactor, which
is essentially a repurposed cooling tower. An alkaline solution in the
contactor reacts with acidic carbon dioxide in air to enrich the capture
solution with potassium carbonate.The contactor contains 80 cubic meters of
plastic packing whose three-dimensional honeycomb structure offers 16,800
square meters of surface area. The setup removes 75 to 80 percent of the
carbon dioxide in the air.Left: The capture fluid, now rich with carbon
dioxide from the air, circulates to a 13-meter-tall reactor. Right: Calcium
hydroxide is added to the capture fluid just before it enters the reactor,
causing two products to be created inside. One is solid calcium carbonate
containing the captured atmospheric carbon. The second, potassium
hydroxide, flows back to the air contactor to capture more carbon
dioxide.As fluid moves up through the reactor, growing pellets of calcium
carbonate spread out in a gradient, with the smallest pellets at the top.
Pellets can be removed via these sample ports and analyzed in order to
optimize the process.The heaviest pellets settle at the bottom of the
reactor and are periodically removed, washed to remove fine crystals and
capture fluid, and dried. The finished product is solid grains of calcium
carbonate that resemble a fine couscous.Controlling the formation of
calcium carbonate crystals is critical. Fine crystals serve as seeds for
future pellets, ensuring the sustainability of the process. Too many fine
crystals, however, produce a caustic sludge that’s difficult to
process.Dried pellets are fed into the calciner, in which a 900 °C inferno
of natural gas burning in pure oxygen roasts a rolling mass of calcium
oxide. The calcium carbonate pellets spontaneously break down, producing
more calcium oxide and releasing carbon dioxide gas.Calcium oxide mixed
with water regenerates calcium hydroxide for use in the pellet reactor.

Next up at Squamish: turning captured carbon dioxide (now vented back to
the air) into a low-carbon transportation fuel. By reacting carbon dioxide
with hydrogen, Carbon Engineering plans to synthesize a fuel with less than
one-third the carbon content of conventional gasoline. Corless estimates
the fuels will cost $4 to $6 per gallon, but he expects to fetch a premium
in places such as California and the European Union, where mandates require
fuel suppliers to reduce their carbon content annually. Ultimately, says
Corless, fuel from air capture may prove crucial to break the fossil-fuel
dependence everywhere

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