Poster's note : appears to ignore a) grinding energy and b) recent work on
ocean pipes

http://www.theenergycollective.com/roger-arnold/2381903/the-carbonate-solution-part-2-other-approaches

The Carbonate Solution, Part 2: Other Approaches

July 4, 2016 by Roger Arnold 8

Beyond the “brute force” approach that I wrote about last week, I want to
cover three other ways to exploit the chemistries of common carbonate
minerals for large scale carbon capture and storage. They are less direct,
and each has its own issues, but all three are much more energy-efficient
than brute force calcination of limestone. The latter takes 3.17 gigajoules
(GJ) minimum per tonne of calcium carbonate, and more like 4.5 to 6 GJ per
tonne in practice.  The alternatives have no corresponding theoretical
minima that can be readily calculated, but practical needs should be at
least a factor of 10 lower.

CCS for coastal power plants

In a CCS approach advocated by researchers at Stanford, UCSC, and LLNL,
[q.v.] flue gas from a power plant is distributed and piped upward through
a large bed of crushed limestone. The limestone is wetted by a flow of
seawater trickling downward. CO₂ in the flue gas acidifies the flow,
enabling it to dissolve calcium carbonate from the limestone surface. Upon
dissolving, the carbonate ions (CO₃²⁻) take up hydrogen ions, becoming
bicarbonate ions (HCO₃⁻). That neutralizes carbonic acid, enabling more CO₂
to dissolve. The dissolved CO₂ makes more carbonic acid, which in turn
dissolves more CaCO₃. At the bottom of the bed, the water, now laden with
calcium bicarbonate, is collected and sent back to the ocean.

That’s probably enough explanation for most readers, but the figure below
gives a starting point for those interested in the physical chemistry. It’s
a graph of relative concentrations of dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC)
species (CO₂ / H₂CO₃, HCO₃⁻, and CO₃²⁻) in water, as a function of pH. The
shaded blue bar shows the pH range of ocean waters, and the arrowhead shows
how the range will shift in response to increasing CO₂ concentrations in
the atmosphere. From the graph, we see that at a pH of 7,  the relative
concentration of carbonate ions is about 1%; that of neutral CO₂ / carbonic
acid is about 8%, while the remainder is bicarbonate.

By Karbonatsystem_Meerwasser_de.svg: User:BeAr derivative work: Meiyuchang
(Karbonatsystem_Meerwasser_de.svg) [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons

Since the molar concentration of total DIC in seawater is only ~2.3 mmol /
liter to begin with, the concentration of carbonate ions in seawater at pH
7 would be an extremely low 23 μmol / liter. With such a low concentration,
the rate at which paired calcium and carbonate ions at the CaCO₃crystal
surface escape into solution will be very much greater than the rate at
which calcium and carbonate ions from solution will pair up on the surface;
the solid CaCO₃ will dissolve.

The chief advantage of this approach to carbon mitigation is that it
combines capture and storage. It is energy-efficient and doesn’t present a
significant parasitic load on the power plant’s output. Also, the seawater
used to irrigate the limestone bed and capture CO₂ can be the same water
that was used for cooling. On the downside, the process consumes limestone
at a high rate, and is practical only for coastal power plants located
close to sizable limestone deposits.

To see that in quantitative terms, consider the overall reaction that this
process implements. In the case of a coal-fired power plant, it’s:

C + O₂ + H₂O + CaCO₃ → Ca(HCO₃)₂ + energy

To a first approximation, coal can be taken as pure carbon, with a mass of
12 grams per mole. Limestone can be taken as pure calcium carbonate, with a
mass of 100 grams per mole. That means that for every ton of coal burned,
8.3 tons of limestone are also consumed.

In practice, consumption would be closer to 6 tons of limestone, since coal
is not pure carbon and not all of the CO₂ produced in burning it can be
captured. But 6 tons of limestone per ton of coal is still a lot. It’s not
that there’s any shortage of it in the world; limestone is hundreds of
times more abundant than fossil carbon. But the logistics of mining,
crushing, and transporting the required amounts are daunting. Consider: a
large coal-fired power plant consumes one trainload of coal each day; this
scheme would add six trainloads of limestone per day on top of that. Every
four hours, a full trainload of crushed limestone would need to be added to
the limestone bed to replace what was dissolved in the preceding four
hours! That’s perhaps not impossible, but it will require a large limestone
bed of at least several hectares..

For gas-fired power plants — which is most of what California has — the
amount of CO₂ per megawatt-hour is only half as great; the amount of
limestone consumed in capturing and storing it would likewise be half as
great. If the plant were only used at an average duty cycle of 30% for
backing wind and solar, it could get by with “only” one trainload of
limestone per day. Given that this approach is one of the most efficient
ways to capture and store CO₂ from gas or coal-fired power plants, the
figure of one trainload of limestone per day to capture the carbon
emissions from a single large gas-fired plant used merely to back wind and
solar resources is sobering. It gives one a feel for the scale of the
carbon emissions problem.

Ocean capture

The main problem with the above approach is its limited scope. As noted,
it’s only applicable for coastal power plants within easy transport
distance of limestone beds. There are more of those than one might think,
but in the context of total anthropogenic carbon emissions, they’re not
that significant. Completely capturing and storing their CO₂ would only
reduce total fossil carbon emissions by perhaps 2%. Is there a way to do
better? In principle, there is. However it requires — among other things– a
different approach to dissolving CaCO₃.

Although CaCO₃, isn’t soluble in surface seawater at pH of 7.8 or higher,
it becomes soluble at higher pressures and lower temperatures — conditions
that can be found in the deep waters of the ocean. That suggests the
possibility of simply dumping freighter loads of crushed chalk or limestone
into deep ocean waters around the world. The dumped material would dissolve
and natural carbonate to bicarbonate conversion would raise the pH in the
deep waters. When those waters reached the surface, they would draw CO₂
from the atmosphere. Would that work?

Yes and no. With a carbon tax, the economics could possibly work. The ratio
of crushed limestone to captured CO₂ is about 9:4. A carbon tax of $30 /
tonne of CO₂ — toward the low side of what’s often mooted — would translate
to $13.50 / tonne of limestone quarried, crushed, and shipped to a deep
ocean area. That’s probably not out of reach for profitability for a large
scale operation. But the timescale doesn’t work. The natural timescale for
deep water alkalinity to migrate to surface waters is upward of 1000 years.
No help over the next few centuries, let alone the next few decades.

There’s a possible way around the timescale problem that would be worth
trying.  That’s to float a large diameter vertical pipeline in the ocean to
pump cold water from the depths where the chalk and limestone dissolve up
to the surface. As it happens, that’s also exactly what’s needed for an
Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion (OTEC) power plant. So the system could be
designed as a renewable energy resource while simultaneously countering
ocean acidification, removing CO₂ from the atmosphere, and lowering global
temperatures.

I won’t go into details here, but I believe there’s a way to engineer a
deep cold water pipe that would have very low capital and operational costs
relative to capacity. The design I’m thinking of, if workable, would go a
long way toward making OTEC installations economically feasible. An
interesting feature, in the context of this discussion, is that a good part
of the energy needed to lift the denser cold water to near the surface
could be supplied by a bucket conveyor running beside the cold water pipe.
It would carry crushed chalk and limestone to depths at which it would
dissolve, generating power in the process.

It’s unlikely that the arrangement could generate any net power, because
after dissolving, most of material lowered by the conveyor would be carried
back up the cold water pipe. But it would at least reduce the amount of
power diverted from the OTEC generators to drive the flow up the cold water
pipe. And it might possibly do more than that: a small amount of heat is
released by the dissolution of solid carbonate minerals and conversion to
bicarbonates. I believe it’s only enough to warm the ascending water flow
by a couple of degrees, but that’s enough to lift the water through the
lowest two kilometers of the pipe before pumping energy would need to be
supplied.

I need to run more calculations to quantify the parameters for this type of
extended OTEC system. But I haven’t figured out a good way to quantify
what could be the system’s most important climate effect: the lowering of
surface water temperatures in the down-current vicinity of the platform. If
it’s able to reduce the absolute humidity of the air blowing over the
cooler surface water, the reduced greenhouse effect from that air mass
could be important for mitigating global warming. It could conceivably be
more important than the captured CO₂. At this point, I simply don’t know.

One thing that is easy to calculate, however, is the total amount of chalk
and limestone that would ultimately need to be consumed annually, if this
approach were used to capture and store the entire 40 annual gigatonnes of
anthropogenic CO₂ emissions. It comes to 91 gigatonnes. For context, the
Wikipedia article on bulk carriers cites 2005 data for the total tonnage of
all bulk cargo shipments worldwide as 1.7 gigatonnes. So we’re looking at
more than a 50-fold increase over that number, just for hauling crushed
chalk and limestone from quarry sites to extended OTEC stations.

Accelerated weathering in soils

The final carbonate chemistry approach to CCS that I want to cover is a bit
different. It uses the soils in warm tropical regions rather than the
oceans for air capture and storage of CO₂. Instead of dissolving limestone,
it uses the natural alkalinity of olivine and other ultramafic silicates
found in basalt rocks to mineralize and permanently sequester CO₂.

Olivines have the generic formula (Mg²⁺, Fe²⁺)₂SiO₄. The notation (Mg²⁺,
Fe²⁺) indicates a mix of magnesium and iron atoms in the +2 oxidation
state. In the case where the mix is 100% magnesium (Mg₂SiO₄) the weathering
reaction can be represented simply as:

Mg₂SiO₂ + 4CO₂ + 2H₂O → 2Mg²⁺ + 4HCO₃⁻ + H₄SiO₄

The products on the right hand side are soluble. In weathering by naturally
acidified rainfall, they’re removed by the runoff water as magnesium
bicarbonate and silicic acid.  The latter, when it reaches the ocean,
fertilizes the growth of siliceous phytoplankton know as diatoms.

Accelerated weathering has received substantial academic and some
commercial attention. One of its most active proponents is Dr. Olaf
Schuiling of the University of Utrecht, Netherlands. In addition to his own
research and published papers, he started the Olivine Foundation, which
maintains the SmartStones website. I won’t attempt to summarize a very
large topic that is well-covered elsewhere (e.g., here), but there’s one
particular approach that I find interesting. It’s one that has been
dismissed as nice in theory, but not practical. It’s the spreading of
serpentine sand or crushed ultramafic minerals over soils where they will
rapidly weather.

Forest soils in warm, wet climates are ideal places for accelerated
weathering to take place. Due to decomposition of leaf litter and other
dead organic matter, the CO₂ concentration in such soils can be quite high.
In fact, it can approach the concentration found in flue gases from a power
plant. That means that the CO₂-induced acidity of liquid water in these
soils is many times higher than it is in raindrops. That makes for a high
rate of chemical weathering for any rock particles that happen to be
present.

If olivine sand or similar crushed minerals could be spread over the forest
floors, it would build up and fertilize the soil while soaking up much of
the CO₂ that would otherwise be released by decay of plant matter. But
there is no existing way to do that efficiently and economically. The sheer
amount of material and the vast areas over which it would need to be
distributed before it could make a real difference have relegated the
approach to the “neat idea, but..” category.

I may have a solution for that. Again, it’s too much to write about here,
but I may have more to say about it after I’ve done some more homework.

Conclusions

What I’ve tried to show in this series of postings is in part just the
sheer magnitude of the CCS challenge. There are a range of technically
feasible approaches, but even the best of them involve a degree of capital
investment and operations that are staggering, if the approach is
implemented at the scale needed to offset all emissions.

It makes sense to do what we reasonably can with resources available; a
carbon tax would make many of these approaches profitable. But it will come
as no surprise to opponents of CCS that the main thrust of world mitigation
efforts still needs to be reducing our use of fossil carbon in the first
place.

I don’t personally care much whether the reduction is achieved through
conservation and energy efficiency, renewables, or nuclear power. Common
sense would dictate focusing our resources on what will give us the most
mitigation “bang” for the buck. But political feasibility does factor in,
and in any case there won’t be any one silver bullet. The problem of
decarbonization and the urgency of moving on it are such that an “all of
the above” approach will be necessary

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"geoengineering" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to geoengineering+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
To post to this group, send email to geoengineering@googlegroups.com.
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/geoengineering.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to