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Brilliant Cement Making Technology Mimics Coral While Removing CO2 From the Atmosphere

by , 12/15/11

Calera Carbonate Technology, coral, calera, brent constanz, biomimicry, portland cement, carbon emissions, cement

Researchers at Stanford University have developed a novel way to create a new form of carbon neutral cement by studying the formation of coral reefs and applying the principles at work. Coral takes in minerals and CO2 and then secretes calcium carbonate to build its hard exoskeleton. Inspired by this construction process, Stanford scientist Brent Constanz has developed a way to capture CO2 and dissolve it in seawater to form calcium carbonate, which has properties suitable for use in construction and could replace Portland cement (which is responsible for more than a ton of CO2 for every ton of product created). This new technology could reduce the environmental impact of construction in a big way by capturing and sequestering CO2 emissions while creating a durable building material.

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3 Responses to “Brilliant Cement Making Technology Mimics Coral While Removing CO2 From the Atmosphere”

  1. rcavaretti RCavaretti says:

    …could replace Portland cement (which is responsible for more than a ton of CO2 for every ton of product created)

    Say what???

  2. i doser mp3 i doser mp3 says:

    latest technology…..i never knew it before..thanks for the information.

  3. ao AO (@acesover5) says:

    This process does NOT produce cement – it produces calcium and magnesium carbonates which are the raw materials in the cement manufacturing process.

    By the way, the calera process results in acidifying the seawater.

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