posted on 2023-05-23, 21:07authored byHao Wu, Sean Aruch, Roni Grayevsky, Yanbin Yao, Simon Emmanuel
Coal combustion is one of the leading sources of CO2 emissions, and it is predicted to remain so for the foreseeable
future. The environmental effects of coal burning can be partially
offset by utilizing fly ash, which is a combustion byproduct, to mineralize
and store carbon. Our study tests a novel method for carbon storage
through the reaction of fly ash with oxalic acid (H2C2O4), creating durable solid oxalate phases. Our
results show that whewellite (CaC2O4·H2O) and weddellite (CaC2O4·(2 + x)H2O, x ≤ 0.5) are formed
when fly ash reacts with H2C2O4 at
ambient temperature and pressure. We examined 2 types of ash and found
that the reaction occurs relatively rapidly, reaching completion within
4 days. Moreover, the reacted material comprised ∼18% Ca oxalate.
During the reaction, portlandite, the primary calcium-bearing mineral
in the ash, was dissolved entirely, although mass balance calculations
indicate that amorphous phases also serve as an important source of
Ca for the oxalate minerals. Reaction modeling suggests that Ca is
released by two phases that dissolve at different rates, with the
rapidly dissolving phase releasing Ca at a rate 40 times faster than
that of the slow phase. Based on our calculations, 1 tonne of reacted
coal fly ash could store over 34 kg of carbon, and the method has
the potential to store more than 35 Mt of carbon per year on a global
scale. Thus, our findings indicate that reacting fly ash with oxalic
acid could reduce the environmental impact of coal burning, and adapting
the technique for use with other alkaline solid wastes may represent
a critical green technology.