New CO2 Harvester Could Help Scrub the Air 368
sciencehabit sends this excerpt from ScienceNOW: "Researchers in California have produced a cheap plastic capable of removing large amounts of carbon dioxide (CO2) from the air. Down the road, the new material could enable the development of large-scale batteries and even form the basis of 'artificial trees' that lower atmospheric concentrations of CO2 in an effort to stave off catastrophic climate change."
Massive farms of artificial trees... (Score:5, Insightful)
From TFA:
The polymer could be useful for building massive farms of artificial trees that would aim to reduce atmospheric concentrations of CO2 and prevent the worst ravages of climate change. But that's only if countries around the globe are willing to spend untold billions of dollars to rein in atmospheric CO2.
It also says:
So you have to expend a fairly large amount of energy heating the media to 85C/185F to get it to give up the CO2, (then more energy to store the CO2).
How long it takes to saturate the polymer is not mentioned, but unless its months between regeneration, the CO2 generated while collecting the polymer media, transporting it to a facility, HEATING it, capturing the recovered CO2, could exceed the amount it could capture. And then you are still left with the CO2 you captured. What to do with that?
So the original purpose of this polymer, to keep C02 out of batteries seems to be a far better use for the polymer than environmental CO2 sequestration.
While far from perfect, farming real trees seems a less energy intensive method [wikipedia.org] especially when treated as a crop, harvested at the optimal time, with the wood used for long duration storage.
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Ooops...
It also says:
Once saturated with CO2, the PEI-silica combo is easy to regenerate. The CO2 floats away after the polymer is heated to 85C.
Re:Massive farms of artificial trees... (Score:5, Insightful)
*CO2 floats away*
To where? Still what hasn't been accounted for is the amount of energy required to produce the polymer. It's probably a petroleum based polymer which requires oil extraction, shipping, processing in a refinery and/or chemical plant, and manufacture. I want to see mass and energy balances. The softer approach of planting trees is probably still the best approach when compared to energy intense Engineering approaches. Trees also have the advantage of binding up water vapour, which is a green house gas much more powerful than CO2.
Re:Massive farms of artificial trees... (Score:5, Funny)
*CO2 floats away*
To where?
Narnia.
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It means the CO2 can be extracted from the absorber (PEI) by heating the material (after saturate it with CO2) up to 85c. This is not that much energy to extract the CO2 out as compared to other CO2 absorbers.
But I still agree that trees would be the best way to deal with CO2. The article said that his original idea of trapping CO2 is to combine it with Hydrogen to produce methanol fuel (as below quoted).
"he (Olah) suggests that society could harvest atmospheric CO2 and combine it with hydrogen stripped fro
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Re:Massive farms of artificial trees... (Score:5, Insightful)
That said, reducing current emissions is the first step. Harvesting existing CO2 is probably step 10 or 11 down that path.
Re:Massive farms of artificial trees... (Score:5, Funny)
If only they could figure out a way to make them self replicating, then set them up to turn the CO2 into something useful, I don't know, how about (and I know it's crazy) sugar? And the whole thing could be solar powered, yeah that's the ticket...
Re:Massive farms of artificial trees... (Score:4, Insightful)
"he (Olah) suggests that society could harvest atmospheric CO2 and combine it with hydrogen stripped from water to generate a methanol fuel for myriad uses."
Here's my suggestion: operate a brewery, use the CO2 resulted from fermentation to generate methanol for a myriad of uses... and sell the beer as a by-product.
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*CO2 floats away*
To where? Still what hasn't been accounted for is the amount of energy required to produce the polymer. It's probably a petroleum based polymer which requires oil extraction, shipping, processing in a refinery and/or chemical plant, and manufacture. I want to see mass and energy balances. The softer approach of planting trees is probably still the best approach when compared to energy intense Engineering approaches. Trees also have the advantage of binding up water vapour, which is a green house gas much more powerful than CO2.
What do you do once you have a forest full of trees? You can't just keep planting them indefinitely or you'd run out of room for forests. Cut them down and bury them? Is there some other way to sequester the carbon?
I thought Algae was a more efficient at capturing carbon than trees?
.
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Cut them down and bury them?
Cut them down, charcoalize them, then bury them. [wikipedia.org]
Re:Massive farms of artificial trees... (Score:5, Funny)
Since oil produces CO2, why not just cut out the middle man and turn oil into plastic and dump that in a landfill?
Re:Massive farms of artificial trees... (Score:5, Insightful)
Ways to sequester captured CO2 as lumber:
* Build houses and furniture out of it
* Use pyrolysis (partial burning without enough oxygen) to create char products (essentially make charcoal). Add it to soil. It improves the nutrient holding capacity of soil and takes a long time to decay itself when buried (~200 years). The reason it holds nutrients is charred wood has lots of tiny holes in it from the plant cells. Nutrients don't get washed away as easily. Holding more nutrients allows the next generation of trees to grow faster, or feed more people, depending what you use the land for. Pyrolysis also generates a bit of energy as a side effect.
* Store the wood in a dry or cold location where it won't rot. There are plenty of deserts and ice caps for that. If you put it on ice, wood is a good insulator, and can reduce melting of glaciers by keeping the sun off them in the summers. That won't make a difference in the middle of Antarctica, but it can help around the margins of ice caps where melting is happening.
Re:Massive farms of artificial trees... (Score:5, Insightful)
The softer approach of planting trees is probably still the best approach....
You're overlooking one irreducibly important fact: planting trees won't make this polymer's producer any money. They don't have a patent on trees, dammit!
Re:Massive farms of artificial trees... (Score:5, Informative)
I used to be a tree farmer, you insensitive clod! (Really, no joke, I was). Planting trees makes plenty of money, even without carbon trading offsets. If you can get credits for CO2 removal, it is even more profitable.
I never cut my trees down, and still made money with it, because the "standing timber" increased in size while I owned it, and therefore was worth more as an asset. You have to buy a forest which is not mature for that to work. Mine were ~20 years old when I bought them, old enough to reach peak growth. Seedlings don't build much lumber volume the first few years. After some time, the maturing trees slow down their growth and some start dying off, so at that point you can start to harvest at a steady rate, and planting replacements for the ones you harvest to maintain growth. When that happens depends on which kind of tree it is.
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Trees don't really control the amount of water vapor in the atmosphere; they don't sequester a large amount of water for a long time. To first order, the amount of water vapor in the atmosphere is controlled by temperature.
Re:Massive farms of artificial trees... (Score:5, Insightful)
blah blah blah.
Planting trees doesn't remove the CO2, it jsut hold it temperarly.
Half of the CO2 gathered during the day is released at night, the other half id given up when it rots.
They said the same thing about storing Carbon in Coal. Its just temporary.
Forests do not all give up half the CO2 gathered at night. In fact Trees sequester about 70+ pounds per tree per year. They make it into wood.
The tree eventually dies. 50 to 200 years later.
The wood rots 5 to 30 years later.
But the forest keeps growing.
New trees feed off of the old rotting trees.
The carbon is sequestered for as long as the Forest stands.
You can't look at one tree and shrug it off as a zero sum game.
The living trees, the dead trees, the leaf litter on the ground, the humus of the soil hold ton upon tons of CO2.
Weigh the forest, living dead, and 10 feet of humus. Put it all on the scale. The whole damn thing.
Divide by 3. That's roughly the weight of the carbon sequestered by the forest. Forever, as long as you let it grow.
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Why not just stop recycling paper and wood products. Just bury them.
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Im guessing we could also figure a way to pull the the carbon from the mix and reburn it ?
It may be trivial when done on a large scale, anything recapturing this carbon is a major plus.
Re:Massive farms of artificial trees... (Score:5, Insightful)
Sorry mate, entropy. Having gained energy by combining Carbon with air, you must put in energy to get your carbon back. All you end up with is a huge/complicated/inefficient battery. AS there are already large amounts of carbon lying around natrually (coal) , it probably isn't worth it.
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It's worth it if you can do it cheaply just for the sole purpose of lowering the CO2 in the atmosphere.
How are you going to power that? (Score:3)
Extracting the carbon out of CO2 is going to require more energy than you'll ever be able to get from burning the products. You don't want to use fossil fuels to power that or else you're going to end up with a net increase in CO2 emissions.
Re:How are you going to power that? (Score:4, Interesting)
Nothing chemically easy to break the bond ? Kind of sucks but oh well, what do we do with it once collected ? feed it to real tree's ? At that point why not just plant real tree's ?
Re:How are you going to power that? (Score:5, Funny)
Just FYI: An apostrophe doesn't always mean Look out! An "S" is on the way!
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Also, if Solar, and Wind energy's were used, wouldn't the day to day carbon burning be impacted? Southern California Edison Electric [latimes.com] thinks so.
Then create charcoal from the trees (Score:2)
Then bury the charcoal in fields, improving soil fertility.
TADAAaaaa!
CO2 captured!
Energy produced!
Soil degradation reversed!
World saved!
Damn, I'm good. I am available on consultancy at ridiculously high rates.
Re:How are you going to power that? (Score:5, Interesting)
This is the future. Trees turned into biomass wood pellets. It's cheaper to convert coal power stations to biomass than to build new ones.
The cycle is nearly complete.
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From Pimentel and Pimentel, Food, Energy and Society, 3rd edition, p. 18:
"Americans burn about 40% more fossil energy than the total solar energy captured by all the plant biomass in the United States each year."
So yes, we could convert coal plants to biomass, but we cannot cover our current consumption with biomass, even if we use every last plant that grows in the US.
Re:Massive farms of artificial trees... (Score:4, Insightful)
We as a species should just decide on whether we want to live in the tropics or the arctic. This constant back and forth is getting tiring.
Re:Massive farms of artificial trees... (Score:5, Interesting)
We as a species should just decide on whether we want to live in the tropics or the arctic.
Or instead of playing god, why don't we try to limit our effect on the environment and let it decide for itself?
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Well, isn't that the official Republican position on healthcare?
I'm kidding, OK, kidding. Back away from the flamethrower.
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We aren't necessarily better off with antibiotics, because by taking them, we are creating superbugs that are resistant to antibiotics [wikipedia.org].
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You probably wouldn't like your car quite so much if you had to pay full price for the roads, and if cities didn't force businesses to overbuild parking lots, and if the negative externalities of gasoline use were added to the price of gasoline.
In short, you're being bribed and coerced into driving. So forgive me for not believing you.
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He (we) do pay full price. At the dealership, the gas pump, and on our tax bill. These things don't build themselves you know. As a society we decided to build them and we pay the full price. Try Macro Economics 101 at your local community college.
Re:Massive farms of artificial trees... (Score:5, Informative)
No. Yesterday there was an article about one small group of scientists who claim that the next ice age should begin in 1500 years based on the frequency of ice ages in past history. One group's predictions hardly qualifies as "general consensus from the scientific community."
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Yesterday, wasn't the general consensus from the scientific community that we were 1500 years off from the next ice age, and that the current concentrations of CO2 in the atmosphere would result in pushing that off for at least another 1000 years?
Well then there is that whole ocean acidification thing. Rising temperatures aren't the only effect of climate change. There is no free lunch here.
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Yesterday, wasn't the general consensus from the scientific community that we were 1500 years off from the next ice age
No. It's a brand new paper. Time will tell whether a consensus forms around it.
Re:Massive farms of artificial trees... (Score:5, Insightful)
I often wonder where people who deny pollution is having any effect on the earth think they are going to live if they are wrong.
Well, some of them aren't real good with the concept of "I could be wrong."
Re:Massive farms of artificial trees... (Score:5, Funny)
I often wonder where people who deny pollution is having any effect on the earth think they are going to live if they are wrong.
On their yacht?
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Global Warming is now officially and forever bundled with Santa Claus, the Easter Bunny, the Tooth Fairy,
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I often wonder where people who deny pollution is having any effect on the earth think they are going to live if they are wrong.
Probably figure they'll live right next door to the "terr'ists behind every tree stump so we must molest all Americans" FUD farmers. They should get along famously, similar outlook of controlling the populace thru terror, etc.
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That's easy. Mars. All they have to do is keep doing what they're doing, but on a different planet, and eventually it will be warm enough. :-)
Heck, for that matter, if we could just come up with a way to efficiently sequester the CO2....
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I often wonder where people who deny pollution is having any effect on the earth think they are going to live if they are wrong.
They won't. By the time the effects show up in force, they'll be dead and buried from some other cause.
Re:Massive farms of artificial trees... (Score:4, Interesting)
From TFA:
It also says:
So you have to expend a fairly large amount of energy heating the media to 85C/185F to get it to give up the CO2, (then more energy to store the CO2).
How long it takes to saturate the polymer is not mentioned, but unless its months between regeneration, the CO2 generated while collecting the polymer media, transporting it to a facility, HEATING it, capturing the recovered CO2, could exceed the amount it could capture. And then you are still left with the CO2 you captured. What to do with that?
So the original purpose of this polymer, to keep C02 out of batteries seems to be a far better use for the polymer than environmental CO2 sequestration.
While far from perfect, farming real trees seems a less energy intensive method [wikipedia.org] especially when treated as a crop, harvested at the optimal time, with the wood used for long duration storage.
With a requirement of only 85 C, they could easily be heated using low-grade waste heat from a process plant, or using a solar concentrator or similar. No additional energy expenditure required. It would also probably be done locally, so there would be little to no transport cost. There will still be some cost to recover and contain it, but it should still be an overall reduction of CO2. There are multiple uses for the CO2, that should not be a problem.
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You have to put it into rational terms though.
1 cubic foot of air weighs 0.0807 lbs. CO2 makes up about 0.039% of our atmosphere, so roughly 0.00315 lbs/qubic foot. 1 gram is about 0.0022 lbs.
Assuming your calculations are accurate. 1000 metric tons would be able to completely remove ALL of the CO2 in a cubic foot of atmosphere.
I am curious as to what the rate on that number is. But I think it's safe to say that in non-arid areas and places with out grey water issues, planting actual trees and grasses is a
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There is a typo in the article summary. The polymer material will reportedly absorb 1.71 mmole (millimoles = 1 x 10^-3^ moles) of CO_2_ per gram of the polymer. A lot better than nmoles (nanomoles = 1 x 10^-9^ moles), but your point still stands, they'll have to do a lot better CO_2_ per gram of polymer to have any atmospheric impact. Also, one mole of CO_2_ has a mass of 44.01 grams, not 75.68.
Re:Massive farms of artificial trees... (Score:4, Informative)
Just piling on....
Research on the net [plant-trees.org] seems to suggest a tree can sequester anywhere form 21 pounds to 73 pounds of CO2 per year, depending on species and size.
Re:Massive farms of artificial trees... (Score:4, Informative)
Someone, somewhere, made a math or transcription error. This http://pubs.acs.org/stoken/presspac/presspac/full/10.1021/ja2100005 [acs.org] says they get 78mg/g. You need about 13 g of this stuff (the treated fumed silica) to adsorb 1 g of CO2.
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Wait, wait... so if we take the wood and turn it into charcoal by outgassing, compress the charcoal, and then store it in underground caverns, maybe, oh, I don't know, um, old coal mines, the cycle will be complete!
Kidding aside, it sounds like a good idea and, with some effort, could be part of a long-term shift in energy source from coal to processed wood, which is probably a good thing, especially if the outgassing products are trapped and used for raw materials.
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Dude, they're from Cali, of course they'll be using solar power for the heat.
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Or, to look at it another way, each gram of the material sops up (44 g/mole * 1.72 x 10e-9 moles = ) 75nano-grams of CO2.
A gallon of gas produces 20 lbs [fueleconomy.gov] or 9.1kg of CO2
So you'd need 9.1kg / 75ng = 120 billion grams of the material to absorb the CO2 output from a gallon of gas.
I don't know the density of this new material or its substrate, but if it's similar to common plastic tarps... A 20x100 foot roll of 10mil plastic film weighs 95 lbs [globalplas...eeting.com] (which probably includes the cardboard spindle).
So that's 43 kg for 2
Re:Massive farms of artificial trees... (Score:4, Informative)
Go here http://pubs.acs.org/stoken/presspac/presspac/full/10.1021/ja2100005 [acs.org] for slightly more accurate information. It's about 13:1 adsorbent:CO2 by weight. Not pretty, but not catastrophic.
Ahh yes, there appears to be a typo in the article linked from the summary. The article from the summary says:
each gram of the material sopped up an average of 1.72 nanomoles of CO2
While your article (which was linked to from the other article) says:
1.71 mmol CO2 per g or 75 mg CO2 per g of adsorbent.
Which makes it 1000 times better than it appears to be in my post above.
oh noes! (Score:5, Funny)
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And once we have a few gigatonnes of CO2 (Score:5, Funny)
How about we bury it at Yucca Mountain? Dissolve it in seawater?
I HAVE IT! We separate the carbon and the oxygen, release the O2 into the atmosphere, and bury the carbon in abandoned coal mines!
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Or make diamonds from it :)
(c)2012, Thud457 (Score:3)
Win-win all around.
Unless giants are real, too.
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We can capture the CO2 and feed it to trees via an elaborate contrivance. We could then chop down the trees to make pretty things.
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Something like that would actually be quite nice.
1. CO2 ...
2.
3. Pretty things!
We produce 29 billion tons per year of CO2 (Score:5, Insightful)
And we're going to catch a significant fraction of it in plastic that we have to manufacture? Seriously?
How about we use something self-replicating instead, which does the same thing and produces useful by-products, like, say, trees?
--PM
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Lol, you can be the first to give up your house to the new reforestation act then. I think rather than trying to reduce the carbon, how about we stop producing it? Somewhere between nuclear power & electric cars fueled off that power.
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I have planted no less than 16 trees on my property in the 7 years I've lived there. I would plant more if only my wife and city regulations would let me (I'm banned from planting mulberry due to pollen concerns, for example.) No need to give up my house in order to have some reforestation!
I'm in favor of reducing carbon output by producing electricity with nuclear or other non-carbon-releasing options.
--PM
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Mulberry? Try something native.
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No need to remove houses. We have plenty of land to grow trees. What we don't have is enough fresh water. Enter desalinization plants. Add a bunch of them near the U.S. coast, and pump metric craptons of fresh water into the grasslands and deserts in the middle of the U.S. Take advantage of the now-arable land to grow forests.
So the only problems remaining are electrical power, money, and time.
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Dude, saying we should plant more trees doesn't mean we have to demolish people's houses to plant trees. There's a lot of land out there.
Dunno what you'd call me (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't think of myself as an environmentalist or anything like that. I'm all for better energy efficiency and cleaner forms of energy, but something like this strikes me as rather dumb. You have to spend energy making these things, and then energy running them, not to mention time and money all to remove a bit of CO2 out of the air. Wouldn't it make more sense to plant more trees instead, and spend the rest of your time and money on cleaner and more efficient methods of powering well everything?
I don't deny that climate change is happening, it's always been happening and I believe that we have some impact on the way it changes, so being as responsible as we can with what we do with 'waste' like CO2 or other byproducts is always important, but things like this in the modern "green" movement just make me shake my head in disbelief.
Re:Dunno what you'd call me (Score:4, Insightful)
But how do you patent a tree and retire a millionaire after the IPO?
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Sadly, reasonable people don't get much credence these days... perhaps it's because we don't scream loudly enough to be heard over the reactionary imbeciles?
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Wouldn't it make more sense to plant more trees instead, and spend the rest of your time and money on cleaner and more efficient methods of powering well everything?
It would make more sense not to put the CO2 into the air in the first place. But if you're going to pull it back out again, it remains to be seen whether artificial trees or real trees have the best cost/benefit ratio. It takes really, really huge forests to make a dent in atmospheric CO2 and reforesting the whole planet won't get CO2 back down to pre-industrial levels any time soon. Maybe a large industrial operation could do better, if the tech improves and economies of scale set in.
Besides which, the
Will somebody think of the plant children (Score:5, Funny)
Artificial trees, great... (Score:2)
lol (Score:2)
Wonderful. The researchers developed a plastic to capture CO2. I dunno, kind of sounds like this isn't green at all. Develop tons of plastic... to fix a problem, nope.
Climate change is one thing (Score:2)
I welcome this kind of innovations very much.
But to be honest I think at the moment our biggest problem is our global energy consumption.
I can do without my computer for a week if we're low on fuel, but food...
Brilliant! (Score:5, Funny)
I was going to just plant some trees, but covering my property in plastic seems like a much better idea!
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I was going to just plant some trees, but covering my property in plastic seems like a much better idea!
If the plastic was green and tree shaped, then everybody wins!
Doesn't seem practical but... (Score:2)
too late, give up already (Score:2)
We are past the tipping point. Forward thinkers need to begin focusing on survival and recovery from catastrophe, not avoidance.
Re:too late, give up already (Score:4, Interesting)
Oh, The Irony! (Score:2)
Trousers the wrong 'way around (Score:2)
Everyone has this idea that the "obvious" solution to our carbon/energy/global warming problems is to reduce consumption. I'm especially amused by authors who try to "guilt" the US into reducing consumption in order to let other cultures have a "fair share" at dwindling resources.
This is poppycock, and it's the wrong solution.
The reason the US has such a high consumption is that people *like* this level of consumption and there should be nothing wrong with that.
The solution is not for us to go back to the s
A Billion Trees (Score:2)
Now we just need to make a billion CO2 scrubbing fake trees.
Regeneration systems (Score:5, Interesting)
The thought of giant CO2 scrubbing plastic trees seems like hyperbole to me. Seems we could plant real trees that work about as well for that. But an obvious application jumped out at me. Undersea vehicles, labs, manned spacecraft, and any other artificially maintained environment that humans have to work in need to remove CO2 because it can be poisonous in sufficiently high concentrations even if there is enough to breathe.
So would this material make good scrubbers for sealed environments people have to work in? If there is a way to vent the waste gases, being able to drive the CO2 off with a bit of heat and using again seems a great feature too.
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More Ass Backwards Geoengineering (Score:2)
Currently, we're extremely efficient at cranking gigatons of carbon into the atmosphere. Assuming for a moment that fake tree manufacturing was extremely energy efficient and carbon neutral, that's a lot of work just to keep up with conveyor-belting coal into power plants and pouring fuel into our vehicles.
However, tree manufacture won't be all that efficient, meaning we'd need several times more fake trees to compensate. Nice out-of-the-box try there, boys, but this dog won't hunt.
Once again, the actual so
Energy to run it? (Score:2)
Does this CO2 scrubber run off of energy that was produced in a CO2-producing generation process?
Simple Answer (Score:5, Funny)
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But then the plastic would absorb the CO2 in your soda and it would go flat.
Frayed Knot (Score:5, Informative)
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Who is they? I'm pretty sure everyone in the scientific community is in complete agreement that the sun is a major factor in climate. The climate without the sun would be dramatically different.
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But the atmosphere is basically saturated with water, and its greenhouse contribution (something on the order of 20C IIRC) is part of the baseline climate with or without humans. In other words water vapor's contribution to climate change is zero, since the amount hasn't (can't have) risen or decreased meaningfully since the dawn of civilization.
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I always throw a bucket of sleeping children on my kitchen fires.
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Calling him skeptical is like calling someone who doesn't believe in germs a 'skeptic'.
There is a point where the leave being a skeptic and enter straight up denier.