npj Materials Degradation 2018-04-04

Carbon dioxide sequestration through silicate degradation and carbon mineralisation: promises and uncertainties

Damien Daval

Index: 10.1038/s41529-018-0035-4

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Abstract

Turning carbon dioxide (CO2) into rocks: controlling this process, which naturally operates at the Earth’s surface over geological timescales, is likely to represent a major technological challenge of this century. One of the recurring criticisms with the carbonation reactions is their sluggishness, as it is commonly admitted that converting silicates into carbonates within geologic reservoirs may take up to several thousands of years, i.e., a duration which is hardly compatible with the goal of achieving net zero emissions by mid-century. Last year, a study that generated substantial interest suggested that after 2 years, more than 95% of the CO2 injected over the course of a pilot project of CO2 injection in lava flows in Iceland might have been mineralised into carbonates. While such results could have been considered as a green light for industrial applications, a new high-profile study based on the same pilot experiment tempered this idea, as it revealed unexpected modifications of deep ecosystems in response to CO2 injection, evidencing a bloom of chemolithoautotrophic bacteria, which have the ability to promote autotrophic C-fixation. Stated in other words, part of the CO2 that was initially thought to be mineralised under the form of stable carbonates might instead have been converted into (much more labile) biomass. Assessing the respective contributions of carbonates and biomass to the C-sequestration should therefore represent a prerequisite prior to large-scale carbon capture and storage through mineral carbonation, to make sure that the cure is not worse than the disease.

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