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by nebopolis
1484 days ago
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Poured concrete actually is a passive remover! The issue is the process of baking carbonate rocks at high temperatures to form the cement. This not only takes a lot of energy, but it inherently drives off CO2 from the rock. Over the decades as concrete slowly gets stronger and stronger it absorbs back a small but substantial fraction of the CO2 it emitted. The way to make this better is to be able to have mixes with lower fractions of cement for a similar level of strength - hence using graphene in this case. |
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Was trying to make a 30cm x 60cm hole in a DIY concrete wall that the last owner of my house had placed over the mains pipe that was leaking from two joints underneath it (I suspect he also DIYed the piping, given its rather unorthodox setup). I had to make room for a plumber to access it.
It was poured in the early 70s, looked pretty, well, homemade, so I figured, easy! Borrowed a concrete breaker, got to it.
3 weeks, very painful wrists from the vibration, and a hired concrete saw, later, I finished my hole.
But holy crap, I had vastly underestimated concrete.