#carbonate

LIVE

materialsworld:

image

By Khai Trung Le


A new type of battery developed by researchers at MIT could be made partly from carbon dioxide captured from power plants. Rather than attempting to convert carbon dioxide to specialized chemicals using metal catalysts, which is currently highly challenging, this battery could continuously convert carbon dioxide into a solid mineral carbonate as it discharges.

The battery is made from lithium metal, carbon, and an electrolyte that the researchers designed. While still based on early-stage research and far from commercial deployment, the new battery formulation could open up new avenues for tailoring electrochemical carbon dioxide conversion reactions, which may ultimately help reduce the emission of the greenhouse gas to the atmosphere.

Currently, power plants equipped with carbon capture systems generally use up to 30 percent of the electricity they generate just to power the capture, release, and storage of carbon dioxide. Anything that can reduce the cost of that capture process, or that can result in an end product that has value, could significantly change the economics of such systems, the researchers say.

Betar Gallant, Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering at MIT, said, ‘Carbon dioxide is not very reactive. Trying to find new reaction pathways is important.’Ideally, the gas would undergo reactions that produce something worthwhile, such as a useful chemical or a fuel. However, efforts at electrochemical conversion, usually conducted in water, remain hindered by high energy inputs and poor selectivity of the chemicals produced.

The team looked into whether carbon-dioxide-capture chemistry could be put to use to make carbon-dioxide-loaded electrolytes — one of the three essential parts of a battery — where the captured gas could then be used during the discharge of the battery to provide a power output.

The team developed a new approach that could potentially be used right in the power plant waste stream to make material for one of the main components of a battery. By incorporating the gas in a liquid state, however, Gallant and her co-workers found a way to achieve electrochemical carbon dioxide conversion using only a carbon electrode. The key is to preactivate the carbon dioxide by incorporating it into an amine solution.

‘What we’ve shown for the first time is that this technique activates the carbon dioxide for more facile electrochemistry,’ Gallant says. ‘These two chemistries — aqueous amines and nonaqueous battery electrolytes — are not normally used together, but we found that their combination imparts new and interesting behaviors that can increase the discharge voltage and allow for sustained conversion of carbon dioxide.’

The battery is made from lithium metal, carbon, and an electrolyte that the researchers designed. While still based on early-stage research and far from commercial deployment, the new battery formulation could open up new avenues for tailoring electrochemical carbon dioxide conversion reactions, which may ultimately help reduce the emission of the greenhouse gas to the atmosphere.

You are Isotopes (Part III)

This is the third part of a seriesaboutisotopesand why they’re useful and interesting to scientists.

Isotopes are the flavors of elements. And because our universe is made up of atoms of elements, every object can be thought of as a delicious smoothie of flavors. Scientists like me are trying to reverse engineer those mixtures and pick out individual tastes, in order to answer questions about…

View On WordPress

Nature Cover (mock) | April 2016Footprints of Life: How Earth’s oldest rocks are revealing ancient l

Nature Cover (mock) | April 2016

Footprints of Life: How Earth’s oldest rocks are revealing ancient life at home - and on Mars.

3D modelling project centred around biologically mediated carbonate precipitation by filamentous cyanobacteria.


Post link
Fossilized bivalve shells buried in an ancient sea sediments are receiving daylight for the first ti

Fossilized bivalve shells buried in an ancient sea sediments are receiving daylight for the first time in ~250 million years. These sediments are rich in iron minerals, which has replaced the carbonate shell material and preserved the original texture of the shell. Thank you iron oxides for preserving the growth layering of this shell for us to admire.

Beach-side outcrop in southeastern Australia.


Post link
Cerussite with Baryte and Galena displaying fluorescenceLocality: Unknown375 nm (Longwave) UV LightCerussite with Baryte and Galena displaying fluorescenceLocality: Unknown375 nm (Longwave) UV Light

Cerussite with Baryte and Galena displaying fluorescence

Locality: Unknown

375 nm (Longwave) UV Light


Post link
Salt curing is the act of using salt to draw moisture out of meat for the purposes of making it safe

Salt curing is the act of using salt to draw moisture out of meat for the purposes of making it safe to eat for longer, as seen in this delicious-looking ham stalactite from Argentina.


Post link
loading