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by L_226
1211 days ago
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Seawater <> CO2 reactions are quite complex, because various compounds form from dissolved gaseous CO2 in the water and the molecules interact in ways that are difficult to quantify (I am not a chemist). My layperson understanding is that carbonic acid ("normal" dissolved CO2) can break down into bicarbonate ions, which themselves can further break down into single carbonate ions. Then depending on what other ions are present in the water e.g. calcium you get various new compounds forming from the bicarbonate and carbonate ions and the metals. So you have a multi-step equilibration process that kind of recursively effects itself and also depends on local pressures, density, presence of other ions, temperature and so on. In reference to the "big ponds" - yes, people are doing this (myself included) but our process relies on using microalgae as the agent of decarbonisation, and our R&D is going into more efficient ways to produce and harvest the microalgal cells. Photosynthesis is still a pretty good way to capture CO2, and microalgae grow the fastest. |
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I've also wondered about whatever mineralization happens in making sea shells - I understand that's another natural process that fixes CO2, is that something that could be replicated, artificially or through growing a high concentration of little shellfish?