*Global Warming Fix? Carbon Dioxide Captured Directly From Air With Simple
Machine*

Source: ScienceDaily
URL: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/09/080929123941.htm
Posted date: 30 September 2008

— University of Calgary climate change scientist David Keith and his team
are working to efficiently capture the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide
directly from the air, using near-commercial technology.

In research conducted at the U of C, Keith and a team of researchers showed
it is possible to reduce carbon dioxide (CO2) – the main greenhouse gas that
contributes to global warming – using a relatively simple machine that can
capture the trace amount of CO2 present in the air at any place on the
planet.
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*University of Calgary climate change scientist David Keith and his team are
working to efficiently capture the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide directly
from the air, using near-commercial technology. This is the machine.
(Credit: Image courtesy of University of Calgary)
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*
"At first thought, capturing CO2 from the air where it's at a concentration
of 0.04 per cent seems absurd, when we are just starting to do
cost-effective capture at power plants where CO2 produced is at a
concentration of more than 10 per cent," says Keith, Canada Research Chair
in Energy and Environment.

"But the thermodynamics suggests that air capture might only be a bit harder
than capturing CO2 from power plants. We are trying to turn that theory into
engineering reality."

The research is significant because air capture technology is the only way
to capture CO2 emissions from transportation sources such as vehicles and
airplanes. These so-called diffuse sources represent more than half of the
greenhouse gases emitted on Earth.

"The climate problem is too big to solve easily with the tools we have,"
notes Keith, director of the Institute for Sustainable Energy, Environment
and Economy's (ISEEE) Energy and Environmental Systems Group and a professor
of chemical and petroleum engineering.

"While it's important to get started doing things we know how to do, like
wind power nuclear power and 'regular' carbon capture and storage, it's also
vital to start thinking about radical new ideas and approaches to solving
this problem."

Energy-efficient and cost-effective air capture could play a valuable role
in complementing other approaches for reducing emissions from the
transportation sector, such as biofuels or electric vehicles, says David
Layzell, ISEEE's Executive Director.

"David Keith and his team have developed a number of innovative ways to
achieve the efficient capture of atmospheric carbon. That is a major step in
advancing air capture as a solution to a very pressing problem," Layzell
says.

"David Keith's vision and originality are key factors in our ranking this
year as the top engineering school in Canada for sustainability initiatives,
both in terms of research and curriculum," says Elizabeth Cannon, Dean of
the Schulich School of Engineering. "Leaders like this are not commonplace,
and we are proud to get behind this kind of leadership at the Schulich
School."

Air capture is different than the carbon capture and storage (CCS)
technology which is a key part of the Alberta and federal governments'
strategies to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. CCS involves installing
equipment at, for example, a coal-fired power plant to capture carbon
dioxide produced during burning of the coal, and then pipelining this CO2
for permanent storage underground in a geological reservoir.

Air capture, on the other hand, uses technology that can capture – no matter
where the capture system is located – the CO2 that is present in ambient air
everywhere.

"A company could, in principle, contract with an oilsands plant near Fort
McMurray to remove CO2 from the air and could build its air capture plant
wherever it's cheapest – China, for example – and the same amount of CO2
would be removed," Keith says.

Keith and his team showed they could capture CO2 directly from the air with
less than 100 kilowatt-hours of electricity per tonne of carbon dioxide.
Their custom-built tower was able to capture the equivalent of about 20
tonnes per year of CO2 on a single square metre of scrubbing material – the
average amount of emissions that one person produces each year in the North
American-wide economy.

"This means that if you used electricity from a coal-fired power plant, for
every unit of electricity you used to operate the capture machine, you'd be
capturing 10 times as much CO2 as the power plant emitted making that much
electricity," Keith says.

The U of C team has devised a new way to apply a chemical process derived
from the pulp and paper industry cut the energy cost of air capture in half,
and has filed two provisional patents on their end-to-end air capture
system.

The technology is still in its early stage, Keith stresses. "It now looks
like we could capture CO2 from the air with an energy demand comparable to
that needed for CO2 capture from conventional power plants, although costs
will certainly be higher and there are many pitfalls along the path to
commercialization."

Nevertheless, the relatively simple, reliable and scalable technology that
Keith and his team developed opens the door to building a commercial-scale
plant.

Richard Branson, head of Virgin Group, has offered a $25-million prize for
anyone who can devise a system to remove the equivalent of one billion
tonnes of carbon dioxide or more every year from the atmosphere for at least
a decade.

Technical details of the air capture technology are available at:
http://www.ucalgary.ca/~keith/AirCapture.html<http://www.ucalgary.ca/%7Ekeith/AirCapture.html>

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