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New facility at KIT produces carbon out of air by Staff Writers Karlsruhe, Germany (SPX) Jan 13, 2023
Germany is progressing on its way to climate neutrality - and has to close carbon cycles in its industries as soon as possible to get there. To reach the 1.5-degree target, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) suggests to remove and permanently store already emitted CO2. "We have to find completely new technological solutions if we want to keep up industrial production," says Dr. Benjamin Dietrich of the KIT Institute of Thermal Process Engineering (TVT). "This includes the industrial carbon supply. Carbon is needed for the production of batteries, building materials, colors, and in the agricultural sector. So far, it comes largely from fossil sources." In the research project NECOC (short for: NEgative CarbOn Dioxide to Carbon) coordinated by Dietrich, the associated partners KIT, INERATEC, and Climeworks develop a process to convert CO2 from the atmosphere into carbon. "If this carbon remains permanently bound, we successfully combine negative emission with a component of the post-fossil resource supply as part of a future carbon management strategy. This represents a double contribution to a sustainable future," Dietrich explains. In the first project phase, the research team constructed a container-sized test facility, which now went into operation. This first-phase installation removes two kilograms of CO2 from the ambient air in one day and turns it into 0.5 kilogram of solid carbon.
In Three Steps from Greenhouse Gas to Useful Resource This is where the third process step takes place: In rising bubbles, a pyrolysis-reaction splits the methane molecules, creating hydrogen, which can be returned to split CO2. The only remaining part is carbon, which floats on the tin as micro granular that can be taken off mechanically on a regular basis. Changing process parameters like the temperature level allows the production of different carbon modifications like graphite, carbon black, or even graphene.
Optimize and Scale for Industrial Application "We are also looking into an integration of high-temperature heat storages and direct solar heating." Additional points of research are the inclusion of CO2 point sources, novel approaches to the extraction of CO2 from the air, and the influence of trace components and impurities in the process network on the carbon quality.
Significant reductions in global greenhouse gas emissions still possible Montreal, Canada (SPX) Jan 12, 2023 About a quarter of the world's electricity currently comes from power plants fired by natural gas. These contribute significantly to global greenhouse gas emissions (amounting to 10% of energy-related emissions according to the most recent figures from 2017) and climate change. By gathering data from 108 countries around the world and quantifying the emissions by country, a McGill-led team, which includes researchers from Carnegie Mellon, Johns Hopkins, University of Texas (Austin) and the Univers ... read more
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