Published by Todd Bush on February 3, 2025
Construction is imminent for a carbon-capture project aimed at reducing CO2 emissions from steel production while producing carbon-neutral calcium carbonate. At the U.S. Steel (Pittsburgh, Pa.; www.ussteel.com) manufacturing facility in Gary, Ind., a carbon-capture system designed by CarbonFree (San Antonio, Tex.; www.carbonfree.cc) will capture CO2 emissions from the fluegas of the steel plant and convert it into powdered calcium carbonate for a wide range of applications, including as a component in paints, coatings, and adhesives, as well as food, plastics, and others.
>> In Other News: Hanwha and Baker Hughes Enter into Joint Development Agreement for Ammonia Gas Turbines
CarbonFree has developed a process, known as SkyCycle™, to convert exhaust CO2 into high-purity CaCO3. The process works by contacting the flue gas with a magnesium hydroxide solution that captures the CO2 as magnesium bicarbonate (diagram). The magnesium bicarbonate is reacted with CaCl2 derived from calcium-containing slag onsite, allowing the product CaCO3 to precipitate out of solution. Slag is a byproduct of the blast-furnace steel process that contains a mix of metal oxides. The process also involves recovering MgCl2 from the reaction that produces the CaCO3 product and heating it to decompose it into MgOH and HCl, which are then used in another cycle of the process. Treating the slag with HCl can produce the required CaCl2.
“We use LeChatelier’s principle of chemical equilibrium to drive the reactions in the cycle,” explains Bill Bryant, marketing director at CarbonFree. “Instead of talking about the cost of carbon required for carbon capture, this approach allows us to talk about lowering the carbon footprint of our customers’ products, while making a sustainable and profitable business.”
The carbon-neutral CaCO3 product, known as endurocal®, was launched in November 2024, and Bryant says pilot-scale samples of the product are available for applications testing from the company’s demonstration plant at Southwest Research Institute (SwRI; San Antonio, Tex.; www.swri.org).
CarbonFree says endurocal has the same properties as conventionally produced precipitated calcium carbonate (PCC), in terms of particle shape, particle size distribution, and purity, but with a lower cost and zero carbon footprint.
Follow the money flow of climate, technology, and energy investments to uncover new opportunities and jobs.
Inside This Issue 🚢 Clean Fuels, Clear Skies: How Maritime Shipping Is Turning to Hydrogen, Ammonia, and Carbon Capture 🧪 Carbon Capture Could Become Practical with Scalable, Affordable Materials ...
Inside This Issue 🗑️ The Next Big Thing in Carbon Capture? Trash. ⚡ Hydrogen Hope on the Chopping Block: How ARCHES and Other Blue-State Projects Got Caught in the Crossfire 📊 GEP Expands Carbon D...
Inside This Issue 🔧 America Bets Big on Blue Hydrogen: Inside the Engine Revolution Backed by Top Institutions 🤖 Bringing AI to Carbon Capture: How Imperial College is Revolutionising Plant Operat...
Carbon Capture Could Become Practical with Scalable, Affordable Materials
Researchers can pull carbon directly from the air using changes in humidity, now with inexpensive materials The Problem Atmospheric CO₂ continues to increase and, despite considerable worldwide e...
Frontier Signs Deal to Remove 100,000 Tonnes of Carbon Emissions from Garbage Incineration
Frontier, a carbon removal buyer coalition, announced that it has facilitated purchases of 100,000 tons of carbon removals to be generated between 2029 and 2030, through the abatement of emissions ...
ClearSign Technologies to Present at the LD Micro Main Event XVII
TULSA, Okla., April 4, 2025 /PRNewswire/ – ClearSign Technologies Corporation (Nasdaq: CLIR) ("ClearSign" or the "Company"), an emerging leader in industrial combustion and sensing technologies tha...
Zefiro Founder and CEO Appears on Orphan and Marginal Wells Panel in Fort Worth, Texas Led by JPMorganChase Head of Operational DecarbonizationThe annual event, which is hosted by the Neeley School...
Follow the money flow of climate, technology, and energy investments to uncover new opportunities and jobs.