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Making cement from a different type of rock could clean up emissions
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Making cement from a different type of rock could clean up emissions

[RSS: feeds.arstechnica.com] Limestone might not be the only source for Portland cement.

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[RSS: feeds.arstechnica.com] Limestone might not be the only source for Portland cement.

Cement production alone currently accounts for about 8 percent of global CO2 emissions, so considerable effort is going into lowering that number. Efficiency can be increased, and energy sources can be swapped for cleaner ones, but a stubborn reality remains: The byproduct of turning limestone into lime during cement production releases CO2 gas. These โ€œdirect process emissionsโ€ are actually slightly larger than the emissions from burning fuel to heat the kilns and drive this process.

A new paper in Communications Sustainability suggests a route to eliminating direct process emissions by removing a bedrock assumption. What if we donโ€™t have to use limestone cement?

Get out of Portland

The material we call โ€œPortland cementโ€ was developed in the 1800s. It simply requires heating limestone (calcium carbonate) and adding something like clay or coal ash. This gives you the calcium oxide (lime) youโ€™re after but also releases the CO2 that results when you pull an oxygen atom from carbonate.

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