So in a way it'd be almost analogous to the petrochemical refining process rather than traditional metal ore: raw material goes in, various magic happens in a step-by-step process, several valuable outputs are extracted at different stages, not just a single metal and accompanying waste stream.But there is another interesting aspect to this idea: The other components of the basalt also have value. Iron, magnesium, and aluminum could also be separated and recovered, and leftover silicate material can serve as the additive for Portland cement instead of something like coal ash. So if these things were done together, the process could become more economically feasible.
Superb typo, I insist you leave it up....
In this case, instead of crude it's basalt, and instead of diesel and naptha and petrolatum you'd have aluminum, sad, and cement.
Yes, but we call that "Roman cement." The process may be the same but process and formulation are different things, as you illustrate in your final sentence."The material we call “Portland cement” was developed in the 1800s"
Uh... See Roman cement; made in the same way. Heating limestone and seashells (both are calcium carbonate). Differing additives made different kinds of cement. It took until about 20 years ago to re-discover that volcanic ash made Roman cement self-healing under seawater.
The paper proposes dissolving silicate minerals in hydrochloric acid then precipitating the calcium hydroxide. That's insane, right? Impossible at scale even remaking the HCl via electrolysis as the last step? Driving off CO2 from CaCO3 is so straightforward (and admittedly harmful) that it's hard to imagine a world where we replace "heat rock up" with HCl -> precipitate with NaOH -> clinker Ca(OH)2 -> electrolyze NaCl -> repeat.
A few of those elements occur relatively rarely as minerals (iron in meteorites), but most of these elements don't occur as natural, fixed composition, crystalline forms…that is, not as minerals. Important minerals in basalt include olivine, pyroxenes, and plagioclase feldspar.Basalt contains a mix of minerals that include calcium, aluminum, iron, magnesium, sodium, silicon, and oxygen.
TacoThere's a company in Massachusetts that's been trying to commercialize this process for years (starting with the easy part, using electric furnaces instead of carbon-fueled ones). They were starting to build a factory when their federal grant got suddenly cancelled, which led to a board shakeup and major layoffs. They're basically walking dead at this point, with the DOE stalling them about the grant and no new investors stepping up that I can see. Seems they might have done better with a more aggressive legal strategy to get their grant back:
https://www.latitudemedia.com/news/...to-be-the-bellwether-for-canceled-doe-grants/
And given that cement is one of the tougher nuts to crack in the struggle to reduce global greenhouse gas emissions, concrete solutions are welcome.
Re Aluminium, in NZ the abundant renewable energy is cheap for the Rio Tinto smelter (due to sweetheart contracts backed by government eg. taxpayers ).Superb typo, I insist you leave it up.
You do indeed get an output of Sad - from the companies that go out of business if this works at scale (note, it's not that different from what we do with Aluminium, where the main input is energy, so we just . . . process it in NZ and Iceland, where cheap, abundant, renewable energy is.
Just for context, five minutes ago they were pulling around 800MW from a total national load of 4826MW, so between 1:6 and 1:7 of the total, depending on time of day and season.
It's where old rocks go to retire.The dream of concrete is dying in Portland.
And the way it's self healing is by re-absorbing the carbon dioxide that was originally emitted during its manufacture, to generate calcite crystals that seal the cracks. So the emissions calculations for hydraulic concrete should be (I would guess already are) adjusted for the CO2 that's resorbed over time."The material we call “Portland cement” was developed in the 1800s"
Uh... See Roman cement; made in the same way. Heating limestone and seashells (both are calcium carbonate). Differing additives made different kinds of cement. It took until about 20 years ago to re-discover that volcanic ash made Roman cement self-healing under seawater.
That's an interesting idea.
I wonder if there's an extension. The other problematic aspect of cement / concrete is the need to mix it with sand. And sand is in short supply; folk are increasingly digging up environments they really shouldn't (either because they're natural wonders, or because they belong to someone else, or both). If in crushing and processing basalt they could have a sand-like product too (maybe the bits of rock that don't doing into the cement?), then that could be completely transformational. Low / no emissions, and no more sand quarrying. I've no idea if its at all feasible, but it'd be cool if it were.
Um... What a about this?Toss that in a kiln with additives of your choice, and with less heating than you need for limestone, you’ve got Portland cement, with only water vapor released.
Over time, concrete will degrade and fall apart. Doesn't that chemical reaction actually take CO2 out of the air? In effect, all the concrete we have made, is slowly dedgrading and offseting the original emissions needed to make it?
The NW US was a focus for aluminum production during WW2 for a number of reasons, but chiefly because hydroelectric power from the Columbia River was cheap and abundant. Same reason, of course, that AI datacenters are moving there now. If there's any power left after the AI people are done, that might be a good area to locate this alternative cement production (if it works at scale). A bonus, of course, is that much of inland WA and OR is covered by a flood-basalt plateau, so the raw material wouldn't have to be hauled very far,Superb typo, I insist you leave it up.
You do indeed get an output of Sad - from the companies that go out of business if this works at scale (note, it's not that different from what we do with Aluminium, where the main input is energy, so we just . . . process it in NZ and Iceland, where cheap, abundant, renewable energy is.
My impression is that the water cycle is quick, perhaps even better than the methane cycle, when it comes to removing moderate excess amounts from the atmosphere (once the excess production ends, of course). Both operate on time scales that are potentially observable in human-species-relevant (though probably not for individuals) timelines.Um... What a about this?
Given the compounding effects of water vapor on climate change, and the ubiquity of construction with concrete, I'm not sure "only" applies.
I mean, if concrete production and use creates 8% of climate change issues, but water vapor adds 50% to the problem of increasing the heat capacity of the atmosphere, is that still a net plus for water vapor over carbon, given the apparently smaller amount of energy used in the new way to create the concrete in the first place?
My maths don't want to work well today, but seems to me that's a legitimate consideration.
Hot water vapor can be trivially condensed into liquid water if desired. And as noted by @real mikeb_60, it's going to equilibrate between vapor, liquid, and solid forms in the atmosphere really quickly anyway. So yes it's a greenhouse gas,, but it's not one we can control very well other than by lowering the temperature of the atmosphere and oceans. Which we're doing a craptastic job of.Um... What a about this?
Given the compounding effects of water vapor on climate change, and the ubiquity of construction with concrete, I'm not sure "only" applies.
I mean, if concrete production and use creates 8% of climate change issues, but water vapor adds 50% to the problem of increasing the heat capacity of the atmosphere, is that still a net plus for water vapor over carbon, given the apparently smaller amount of energy used in the new way to create the concrete in the first place?
My maths don't want to work well today, but seems to me that's a legitimate consideration.
Funny thing. I happen to know where there is an enormous disused aluminum smelter with high tension lines running straight to it from the Grand Coulee Dam.The NW US was a focus for aluminum production during WW2 for a number of reasons, but chiefly because hydroelectric power from the Columbia River was cheap and abundant. Same reason, of course, that AI datacenters are moving there now. If there's any power left after the AI people are done, that might be a good area to locate this alternative cement production (if it works at scale). A bonus, of course, is that much of inland WA and OR is covered by a flood-basalt plateau, so the raw material wouldn't have to be hauled very far,