Copper-powered carbon sequestration

17 January 2010

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Some coppers

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We've heard about carbon sequestration, deep beneath the Earth, but now here's another way of dealing with the CO2problem - with copper.

Part of the reason that CO2is a problem is that it's quite tricky to extract it from the air as it's quite a stable molecule, at least compared with oxygen. And so most of the time gaseous oxygen will bond to a metal, for example, before carbon dioxide does.

But this new copper complex, reported in the journalSciencethis week, can ignore boring old O2and go straight for CO2.

A team of researchers, led by Elisabeth Bouwman at the Leiden Institute of Chemistry, say that typically, the problem with oxygen is that it will gain an electron more readily than CO2.CoppersBut this copper complex will happily donate electrons to carbon dioxide instead.

So, to extract CO2from the air, they put this copper complex into solution. Atmospheric CO2to which it's exposed is then absorbed. Next, to remove the captured carbon, they just added a lithium salt solution, apply a low voltage - 0.03V - across it, and the carbon precipitates as an organic compound.

As a bonus, this by-product can be converted into useful compounds which can be used in cleaning products and things like wood preservation.

But what's really useful is that the copper complex can be cleaned at the end of the reaction and re-used. The researchers report that they managed to do this six times in seven hours.

Also, compared with other methods of sequestration, it's actually quite cheap although there is a possibility that accessible copper ores might run dry not too far into the future!

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