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Article

Calcium Carbonate Cement: A Carbon Capture, Utilization, and Storage (CCUS) Technique

1
Fortera Corporation, 251 E. Hacienda Ave, Suite B, Campbell, CA 95008, USA
2
Calera Corporation, Los Gatos, CA 95032, USA
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Submission received: 28 April 2021 / Revised: 15 May 2021 / Accepted: 20 May 2021 / Published: 21 May 2021
(This article belongs to the Section Construction and Building Materials)

Abstract

:
A novel calcium carbonate cement system that mimics the naturally occurring mineralization process of carbon dioxide to biogenic or geologic calcium carbonate deposits was developed utilizing carbon dioxide-containing flue gas and high-calcium industrial solid waste as raw materials. The calcium carbonate cement reaction is based on the polymorphic transformation from metastable vaterite to aragonite and can achieve >40 MPa compressive strength. Due to its unique properties, the calcium carbonate cement is well suited for building materials applications with controlled factory manufacturing processes that can take advantage of its rapid curing at elevated temperatures and lower density for competitive advantages. Examples of suitable applications are lightweight fiber cement board and aerated concrete. The new cement system described is an environmentally sustainable alternative cement that can be carbon negative, meaning more carbon dioxide is captured during its manufacture than is emitted.

1. Introduction

Anthropogenic carbon dioxide (CO2) is contributing to the rising atmospheric CO2 concentration, which is widely considered to be a leading contributing factor for the greenhouse effect, ocean acidification, and global climate change [1]. While efforts are being made to reduce CO2 emissions, global anthropogenic CO2 emissions are projected to continually increase over the coming decades, mainly driven by the growth of emerging countries [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9]. Carbonate rocks are estimated to contain approximately 39,000,000 Gt of terrestrial CO2 and provide a potential pathway for stable, long-term storage of CO2 resulting from human activities [10]. Furthermore, carbonate rocks, such as limestone and marble, both mainly composed of calcium carbonate (CaCO3), have long been widely utilized by mankind as construction materials, which offer a potential solution to upcycle the anthropogenic CO2 into value added materials [11].
CaCO3, one of the most abundant carbonate species in nature, has three anhydrous crystalline polymorphs: vaterite, aragonite, and calcite, with vaterite being the least and calcite being the most thermodynamically stable polymorph [12]. Calcite is the most abundant polymorph and is seen in geological formations, such as limestone, chalk, and marble of either biological or geological origin. Aragonite is less common, but abundant as oolitic sand in the Bahamas, while vaterite is observed much less often due to its instability in ambient conditions. However, in nature, many organisms, e.g., coral, first produce metastable amorphous CaCO3 as a precursor and control its transformation to aragonite or calcite to develop their rigid skeletons [13].
Inspired by the biological use of CaCO3, Fontaine et al. [14] and Combes et al. [15,16] successfully developed a CaCO3-based medical cement through an aqueous precipitation process using calcium chloride (CaCl2) and sodium carbonate (Na2CO3) as feedstocks. The cementing reaction is based on the polymorphic transformation from metastable amorphous CaCO3 and vaterite to aragonite or calcite through a dissolution–reprecipitation process in an aqueous medium. However, limited production scale and mechanical properties (3–13 MPa compressive strength) have restricted larger scale applications in the construction industry. Nevertheless, the results obtained by Combes et al. provide promising insights for the development of a nature inspired, synthetic CaCO3 cement system at scale from anthropogenic CO2 with properties suitable for various building materials applications.
Industrially, three feedstocks are required to produce CaCO3 cement: CO2, calcium, and alkalinity. CO2 can originate from CO2-containing industrial flue gas, e.g., thermal power plants, chemical plants, and cement kilns. Calcium and alkalinity can come from industrial waste streams that contain both calcium and alkalinity in the form of calcium oxide (CaO), calcium hydroxide (Ca(OH)2), and calcium silicates. Examples of calcium and alkalinity-rich industrial waste streams include: carbide lime sludge, an impure Ca(OH)2 by-product of producing acetylene gas (C2H2) from coal and limestone, slag, a Ca/Mg-rich aluminosilicate glass by-product of iron and steel production, and cement kiln dust, an impure CaCO3/CaO by-product of Portland cement manufacturing that is often recycled in the cement kiln feed [17,18]. An acid can be utilized to extract the calcium from the waste feedstock and bring it into solution. Ammonium salts, e.g., ammonium chloride (NH4Cl), ammonium sulfate ((NH4)2SO4), and ammonium nitrate (NH4NO3) have been shown to be effective acids in the production of vaterite from CO2 because they can bring the calcium into solution (Equation (1)), absorb CO2 from a gas stream (Equation (2)), and then be regenerated during the formation of CaCO3 (Equation (3)) [17,19,20].
2NH4Cl(aq) + CaO(s) + H2O(l) → 2NH4OH(aq) + CaCl2(aq)
2NH4OH(aq) + CaCl2(aq) + CO2(g) → (NH4)2CO3(aq) + CaCl2(aq) + H2O(l)
(NH4)2CO3(aq) + CaCl2(aq) → 2NH4Cl(aq) + CaCO3(s)
To promote the formation of metastable forms of CaCO3 over calcite and aragonite, precipitation is performed at high reactant concentrations, needed to achieve high supersaturation and kinetic stabilization [21]. The concentration of carbonate ions is predominantly governed by (1) the rate of transfer of CO2 across the gas–liquid interface, (2) the rate at which CO2 converts into carbonate, and (3) the carbonate–bicarbonate equilibrium. The rate of mass transfer can be increased by increasing the flow rate of gas or by increasing the gas–liquid interface, for example by high shear mixing. Subsequent conversion of CO2 into carbonate can occur through the reaction with water (H2O) or hydroxyl ions (OH), but because the latter reaction is 107 times faster, higher rates can be achieved by performing the reaction at higher pH. Higher pH also favors higher equilibrium concentrations of carbonate over bicarbonate. Except for high gas flow rates, these strategies also improve the CO2 absorption efficiency.
Herein, a novel CaCO3 cement system that mimics the naturally occurring mineralization process of CO2 to biogenic or geologic CaCO3 deposits is described [17,22]. The CaCO3 cement is produced by capturing CO2-containing industrial flue gas and utilizing a calcium and alkalinity-rich industrial waste stream [18]. The result is a cement with a significantly lower CO2 and energy footprint compared to traditional inorganic binders, such as Portland cement. Furthermore, the CaCO3 cement offers processing and performance advantages in a variety of building materials applications over traditional inorganic binders.

2. Materials and Methods

2.1. Raw Materials

The carbide lime sludge (Gilmour & Company, Inc., Vancouver, WA, USA) contained 25 wt% solids and had silica, alumina, and mixed oxidation state sulfur impurities, e.g., S2− and SO42−, see Table 1. The CO2-containing flue gas used was generated from a boiler simulator (GE Energy and Environmental Research Corporation, Irvine, CA, USA) burning propane. NH4Cl (Zaclon, LLC, Cleveland, OH, USA) was used for solubilizing Ca(OH)2.

2.2. Aqueous Mineralization Process

To produce CaCO3 cement, the carbide lime sludge is first solubilized with aqueous NH4Cl then passed through a leaf filter to remove insoluble impurities resulting in an aqueous solution of CaCl2 and ammonia (NH3), see Equation (1). NH3 dissolved in water is in equilibrium with ammonium hydroxide (NH4OH). CO2-containing flue gas (11 vol%) is then contacted with the solution in a three-phase continuous-stirred tank reactor (CSTR) controlled at below 40 °C (Equation (2)), resulting in the precipitation of CaCO3 cement (Equation (3)). The simulated flue gas was blown from the boiler simulator to the absorber via a 20 cm steel pipe using a 600 cfm roots style blower. Unlike some other carbon capture technologies, the CO2 does not need to be concentrated or compressed to high pressures for storage, which is energy intensive. The CaCO3 cement is then mechanically dewatered by a filter press (Outotec Oyj, Helsinki, Finland) and thermally dried in a swirl fluidizer (GEA Processing Engineering, Warrington, UK) to a free-flowing powder. The NH4Cl solution is recovered during dewatering and is recycled for the solubilization of additional carbide lime sludge. Insoluble impurities accounted for 7% of the dry mass of the carbide lime sludge and were composed of 70% mixed oxides and 30% carbon, see Table 1. The insoluble impurities were treated as waste at the pilot plant, but, depending on the composition, could be used in industrial ecology applications, e.g., raw materials for Portland cement production or as supplementary cementitious materials [23]. Figure 1 shows a process block flow diagram of the CaCO3 cement manufacturing process. The CaCO3 cement pilot plant is shown in Figure 2.

2.3. Analysis and Testing

2.3.1. Laser Particle Size Distribution

A Horiba LA-950V2 Laser Scattering Particle Size Distribution Analyzer (two light sources: 650 nm wavelength laser and 405 nm wavelength LED) was used to study the particle size distribution of the CaCO3 cement. Measurements were carried out with test samples dispersed in isopropyl alcohol using refractive indexes of 1.378 for isopropyl alcohol and 1.58 for CaCO3.

2.3.2. X-ray Florescence

An ARL QUANT’X Energy Dispersive X-ray Fluorescence Spectrometer (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Waltham, MA, USA) was used to evaluate the chemical composition of the oven-dried raw materials and the CaCO3 cement. The loss on ignition (LOI) was determined by measuring the mass loss after heating the samples in an electric muffle furnace (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Waltham, MA, USA) at 950 °C for 60 min.

2.3.3. X-ray Diffraction

A X’Pert Pro X-ray Diffractometer (Panalytical, Almelo, Netherlands) was used to determine the phase composition of the CaCO3 cement and the transformed cement pastes. The instrument was operated at 40 kV and 30 mA (Cu Kα1, λ = 1.5406 Å) using a scan range of 5–65° 2θ, a step size of 0.02°, and dwell time of 4 s. The resulting spectra were analyzed using Jade 9 software (Materials Data, Inc., Livermore, CA, USA) for qualitative phase composition information and MAUD software for quantitative Rietveld analysis (QXRD) [24].

2.3.4. Scanning Electron Microscopy

A SU-6600 Field Emission Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM) (Hitachi High-Tech, Omuta, Fukuoka, Japan) was used to collect images of the CaCO3 cement and the transformed cement paste. The samples were coated with platinum/palladium using a sputter coater (Electron Microscopy Sciences, Hatfield, PA, USA) prior to secondary electron imaging.

2.3.5. Compressive Strength

Compressive strength development of the CaCO3 cement was evaluated at 4 h, 10 h, 1 day, 3 days, 7 days, and 14 days. Paste cubes (50 × 50 × 50 mm3) with a solution-to-solid ratio (w/c) of 0.35 were utilized. The solution contained 0.1 M magnesium and strontium chloride. The pastes were mixed according to ASTM C305 and then cast and compressed according to ASTM C109 [25,26]. The pastes cured inside brass cube molds at the specified temperature (40, 60 or 80 °C) with >95% relative humidity for up to 1 day. For testing between 4 h and 1 day, the paste cubes received no additional curing outside their molds. For 3-, 7-, and 14-day tests, the paste cubes were demolded at 24 h and placed in a bath with the same composition as the mix solution at the specified temperature (40, 60, or 80 °C). The paste cubes were removed from their curing environments at the specified time and dried in a 105 °C oven for 4 h before compressive strength testing with a loading rate of 1 kN/s.

3. Results

3.1. CaCO3 Cement Characteristics

The CaCO3 cement has a median particle size of 15 with a 4 µm standard deviation. The D90 and D10 for the CaCO3 cement are 19 and 11 µm, respectively. Figure 3 gives the particle size distribution of the cement. Individual crystals and small agglomerates make up less than 4% of the material at a median particle size of 0.4 µm. The primary nucleated crystals agglomerate in the CSTR to minimize their surface energy, forming a yarn-ball like, spherical morphology assembled of several microplates and lenses (Figure 4). Ammonium ions have been shown to promote the growth of vaterite into hexagonal plates and lenses by adsorbing onto the negatively charged (001) plane, which stabilizes the (001) face promoting the hexagonal crystal growth. Together with the oriented attachment of amorphous precursors and/or nanocrystals, the lens shaped single crystals are developed as the crystal grows [27,28,29]. In Figure 4, an individual lens can be observed above the right most vaterite sphere. In diffusion-based experiments, rosette mesostructures developed because the crystal structures were grown on a flat surface; whereas, in this study the mesostructures are spherical because the crystal agglomerates formed in solution.
Table 2 shows the chemical and mineral composition of the CaCO3 cement. The alumina and silica impurities found in the carbide lime sludge are not found in the resulting cement because they are relatively insoluble impurities that were removed during the filtering process (Figure 1); however, some magnesium and sulfate from the carbide lime sludge do make it into the resulting cement. The chloride in the cement comes from the NH4Cl solution. The mesostructure of the crystal agglomerates creates porosity and high surface area that traps solution. When the cement is heated and dried, the NH4Cl decomposes into hydrogen chloride (HCl) and NH3 gas. The HCl and NH3 gas are recovered while scrubbing the flue gas. A portion of the HCl gas contacts water on the drying CaCO3, forming hydrochloric acid, and is neutralized by the CaCO3 cement, leaving a residual amount of CaCl2 [30]. The CaCO3 cement produced is mainly composed of metastable vaterite (>99 wt%) with a minor amount of calcite (<1 wt%), see Figure 5. Formation of amorphous CaCO3 is deliberately avoided as it is difficult to stabilize and process on an industrial scale. Once the CaCO3 cement is dried, it is stable under ambient conditions.

3.2. Cementitious Reaction

The cementing reaction in CaCO3 cement is the transformation of vaterite (CaCO3) to aragonite (CaCO3) or calcite (CaCO3). Vaterite dissolves and aragonite and/or calcite precipitates. Since the cementing reaction is an aqueous dissolution-reprecipitation process, curing the CaCO3 cement requires high humidity to maintain the transformation of vaterite to aragonite and/or calcite. If the humidity of the curing environment is not controlled, the material will desiccate, and the cementing reaction will cease, similar to Portland cement. Additionally, like Portland cement, the cementing reaction of CaCO3 cement can be accelerated by increasing the curing temperature. Figure 6 shows the temperature dependency of the CaCO3 cementing reaction and compressive strength development. The ultimate compressive strength of the material is 40 MPa, which is 3–13× higher than the 3–13 MPa compressive strength, previously reported for CaCO3 cement developed for medical applications [14,15]. At 40 °C, CaCO3 cement paste does not show strength development through 1 day and takes 14 days to achieve the full strength. By elevating the temperature, full strength can be achieved by 7 or 3 days for 60 and 80 °C, respectively. Additionally, at elevated temperature, CaCO3 cement pastes have developed enough strength by 4 to 10 h (80 and 60 °C, respectively) to be demolded and handled. Fast early strength is important for manufactured building materials with the need to transfer materials between initial and final curing steps, e.g., from pre-curing in molds at lower temperatures to autoclaving in stacks at elevated temperatures.
During the dissolution of vaterite, aragonite is the preferred precipitate over the most thermodynamically stable calcite, as aragonite exhibits an acicular morphology which can lead to an interconnected microstructure. The formation of aragonite can be controlled through the use of magnesium-based additives (e.g., MgCl2, MgSO4, Mg(C2H3O2)2), which are known to inhibit calcite growth [31,32]. The size and aspect ratio of the acicular aragonite can be controlled by the use of strontium-based additives (e.g., SrCl2, Sr(C2H3O2)2), which are known to promote aragonite formation [33], resulting in thinner aragonite crystals with higher aspect ratios.
The interconnection of the aragonite crystals is controlled through the vaterite particle structure. The spherical vaterite particles have a large (15 µm median size) and heterogeneous structure. At all curing temperatures, aragonite crystals nucleate on the surface of vaterite particles, then grow outward, which results in a dense and interconnected honeycomb microstructure (Figure 7). This phenomenon is consistent to Nielsen et al.’s [34] observation where they hypothesized that the phenomenon resulted from the high mobility and exchange of surface ions with solution. For the CaCO3 cement, water is only a medium for the metastable vaterite to dissolve and reprecipitate as aragonite and does not become chemically bonded. All the initial mix water will remain in the system after the cementing reaction and will become porosity after drying. Therefore, the cemented material is inherently more porous and less dense than traditional cements that are based on hydration reactions which chemically bind water. Furthermore, the pore solution of the CaCO3 cement paste is close to neutral compared to the alkaline traditional cements.
Figure 8 shows the conversion of the CaCO3 cement (vaterite) to aragonite in the hardened cement paste. Comparing Figure 6 to Figure 8 elucidates that the cementing reaction and mechanical property development of the CaCO3 cement is entirely dependent on the vaterite to aragonite transformation, which is less complex than traditional cements and can be easily accelerated through temperature without negative effects on performance. For instance, at 80 °C, the CaCO3 cement (99% vaterite and 1% calcite) has fully transformed to 98% aragonite and 2% calcite by 3 days of curing; whereas, at 40 °C, the hardened cement paste is composed of 12% vaterite, 87% aragonite and 1% calcite at 14 days of curing.

4. Discussion

4.1. Raw Materials Availability

Annual global production of carbide lime sludge was estimated at approximately 25 million tons on a dry basis, where >95% is generated in China [23]. Carbide lime sludge typically contains over 90 wt% Ca(OH)2 on a dry basis with minor impurities such as carbon, silica, alumina, iron, and sulfur species depending on the composition of coal and limestone. Carbide lime sludge is used in China to replace limestone as a raw material for Portland cement production which can reduce CO2 emissions yet increase energy demand depending on the additional energy required to dry the carbide lime [35]. However, there is still a significant amount of carbide lime sludge being landfilled and legacy ponds, which cause major environmental issues due to carbide lime sludge’s high alkalinity (pH 12.4).
Iron and steel slag production is, on the contrary, more evenly distributed worldwide. It is estimated that about 510–664 million tons of iron and steel slag were generated annually in 2019 [36]. Iron and steel slags are composed of about 35–60 wt% CaO with other constituents such as silica, alumina, magnesia, and sulfur species. Except ground granulated blast furnace slag, which is used as a supplementary cementitious material to replace Portland cement in mortar and concrete applications, most iron and steel slags are landfilled or can only be utilized in low-value applications such as road stabilization or asphalt aggregates [37]. Based on both the annual production of waste feedstocks (carbide lime sludge and iron and steel slag) and the CaO extraction efficiency, approximately 100 million tons of CO2 could be captured from industrial facilities and approximately 230 million tons of CaCO3 cement could be produced.

4.2. Building Material Applications

With its unique properties, CaCO3 cement is well suited for building materials applications with controlled factory manufacturing processes that are typically made from inorganic binders, such as Portland cement or gypsum. The CaCO3 cement can provide processing and performance advantages over Portland cement, e.g., shorter production cycles, lighter weight, and flexibility on fillers and reinforcement elements. Furthermore, CaCO3 cement is white, which makes it easy to color and texturize for decorative purposes.
Because of its neutral pore solution, CaCO3 cement is not suitable for structural applications that require mild steel reinforcement but is suited for composite systems development with the flexibility to incorporate a wide range of reinforcement elements for superior toughness and flexural properties. The neutral pore solution of the CaCO3 cement also makes it amenable for use in environmentally sensitive areas and applications that require biocompatibility.
CaCO3 cement’s porosity has inherent advantages and disadvantages. The advantage is the ability to formulate lightweight products. For example, suitable potential applications are lightweight fiber cement board and autoclaved aerated concrete due to their manufacture in controlled environments that utilize elevated curing temperatures to accelerate property development. In other applications, the porosity could be a disadvantage, such as concrete in severe freeze–thaw or physical salt attack environments. The durability of CaCO3 cement in a range of situations and applications should be investigated in future research projects.

4.3. CaCO3 Cement Manufacturing Energy and Carbon Footprint

The CaCO3 cement manufacturing process (Figure 1) requires both electrical energy for mechanical processes (pre-processing, solubilization, filtration, CO2 capture, CaCO3 precipitation, dewatering, and aqueous recycling) and thermal energy for drying at approximately 130 °C. Based on pilot plant data, production of CaCO3 cement is calculated to require 2.8 to 3.9 MJ/kg when considering a range of dry and wet raw materials. This compares to the 4.6 to 5.6 MJ/kg energy consumed during Portland cement production, mainly from the calcination of limestone at 900 °C and the sintering process at 1450 °C [38]. Since producing CaCO3 cement from waste feedstocks does not require high temperature processes and can capture and store CO2 from industrial emissions, CaCO3 cement has a significantly lower CO2 footprint compared to Portland cement. The energy and carbon footprint for CaCO3 cement manufacturing will vary for different sites and plant scales due to factors such as electricity mix, fuel sources, and operational efficiency.
For the highest energy consumption case (3.9 MJ/kg CaCO3 cement), the electrical energy consumption is 92 kWh/metric ton of CaCO3 cement, and the natural gas consumption is 3.57 GJ/metric ton of CaCO3 cement. The plant operations that consume the most electricity are carbide lime sludge dissolution and filtration (39%) and CO2 absorption including flue gas compression (38%). 88% of the natural gas is consumed in the drying of the feedstock and product. Using a 2019 California grid carbon intensity of 175 kg CO2/MWh, the electricity results in emissions of 16 kg CO2/metric ton of CaCO3 cement. With an emission factor of 56 kg CO2/GJ, the natural gas combustion produces 200 kg CO2/metric ton of CaCO3 cement [39,40]. The total emissions are 216 kg CO2/metric ton of CaCO3 cement. Figure 9 compares the carbon captured and emitted during CaCO3 cement production to the CO2 emitted during Portland cement production. Since every metric ton of CaCO3 cement produced captures 440 kg of CO2 and manufacturing CaCO3 cement releases 216 kg of CO2, CaCO3 cement has a net capture of 224 kg of CO2/metric ton of CaCO3 cement produced. Substituting CaCO3 cement for Portland cement, results in a reduction of 882 kg of CO2/metric ton of cement utilized due to net emissions of 658 kg of CO2 avoided from Portland cement and a net capture of 224 kg of CO2 during the manufacture of CaCO3 cement when utilizing a waste Ca feedstock.
If curing is conducted at elevated temperature, additional energy input is required to heat the cementitious mixture to the curing temperature. For example, 1 m3 of concrete consisting of 305 kg CaCO3 cement, 153 kg water, and 1978 kg of silicious aggregate requires 147 MJ (0.48 MJ/kg CaCO3 cement) to heat from 20 to 80 °C. End of life uses for CaCO3 cement composites would be similar to those of Portland cement composites with the dominant recycling scheme being crushed into aggregate.

5. Conclusions

We have described a method of converting anthropogenic CO2 emissions into CaCO3 cement at a pilot scale. The CaCO3 cement gains approximately 40 MPa of strength during its conversion from vaterite to aragonite, which is 3× higher than previously reported results. The cement paste hardens and gains strength through the formation of a network of interlocking aragonite needles. The conversion and strength gain can be accelerated by elevated curing temperatures, e.g., full conversion and strength in 3 days at 80 °C. The CaCO3 cement system is particularly well-suited in applications that can take advantage of the inherent porosity, low pH, or rapid kinetics. The new cement system described is an environmentally sustainable alternative cement that can be carbon negative, meaning more CO2 can be captured during its manufacture than is emitted when utilizing a waste Ca feedstock.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, I.A.C., M.D., M.J.F., R.J.G., C.W.H. and R.P.T.; methodology, I.A.C., M.J.F., C.W.H. and R.P.T.; formal analysis, I.A.C. and C.W.H.; investigation, I.A.C., M.D., M.J.F., R.J.G., C.W.H. and R.P.T.; resources, M.D. and R.J.G.; writing—original draft preparation, I.A.C. and C.W.H.; writing—review and editing, I.A.C., M.D., M.J.F., R.J.G., C.W.H. and R.P.T.; visualization, C.W.H.; supervision, M.D. and R.J.G.; project administration, I.A.C. and M.J.F.; funding acquisition, M.D. and R.J.G. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This material is based upon work supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Fossil Energy, under Award Number DE-FE-0002472.

Institutional Review Board Statement

Not applicable.

Informed Consent Statement

Not applicable.

Data Availability Statement

All research data are available and can be furnished upon request.

Acknowledgments

The authors express their thanks to their colleagues, scientific advisors, and investors for their dedicated support of the project. Appreciation for their assistance in conducting experiments is given to Patricia T. Lee, Samuel O. Morgan, Terilyn Q. Nguyen, Adrian Quiroz, and Chantel C. Tester. Finally, the authors thank Guillaume A. Calas and Michael J. Weiss for their assistance modeling the energy demand and CO2 emissions of the CaCO3 cement.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest. The funders had no role in the design of the study; in the collection, analyses, or interpretation of data; in the writing of the manuscript, or in the decision to publish the results.

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Figure 1. Block flow diagram of the CaCO3 cement manufacturing process.
Figure 1. Block flow diagram of the CaCO3 cement manufacturing process.
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Figure 2. CaCO3 cement pilot plant.
Figure 2. CaCO3 cement pilot plant.
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Figure 3. Particle size distribution of the CaCO3 cement.
Figure 3. Particle size distribution of the CaCO3 cement.
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Figure 4. SEM image of the metastable CaCO3 cement (vaterite).
Figure 4. SEM image of the metastable CaCO3 cement (vaterite).
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Figure 5. XRD pattern of CaCO3 cement (V = vaterite; C = calcite).
Figure 5. XRD pattern of CaCO3 cement (V = vaterite; C = calcite).
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Figure 6. Temperature dependency of CaCO3 cement strength development.
Figure 6. Temperature dependency of CaCO3 cement strength development.
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Figure 7. SEM image of the hardened cement paste (predominately aragonite).
Figure 7. SEM image of the hardened cement paste (predominately aragonite).
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Figure 8. Conversion of CaCO3 cement to aragonite as a function of time and temperature (quantified by QXRD).
Figure 8. Conversion of CaCO3 cement to aragonite as a function of time and temperature (quantified by QXRD).
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Figure 9. Carbon footprint of the pilot-scale CaCO3 cement manufacturing process compared to Portland cement manufacturing process (based on the upper range of energy consumption for the CaCO3 cement and average Portland cement emissions assuming 60% of emissions are from the calcination of limestone and 40% of those emissions are recaptured over 100 years [41,42,43]).
Figure 9. Carbon footprint of the pilot-scale CaCO3 cement manufacturing process compared to Portland cement manufacturing process (based on the upper range of energy consumption for the CaCO3 cement and average Portland cement emissions assuming 60% of emissions are from the calcination of limestone and 40% of those emissions are recaptured over 100 years [41,42,43]).
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Table 1. Chemical composition of the oven-dried carbide lime sludge.
Table 1. Chemical composition of the oven-dried carbide lime sludge.
OxideMass (%)
CaO70.0
SiO22.4
Al2O31.7
MgO0.1
Fe2O30.3
SO30.7
MnO0
TiO20
P2O50
Cl0
LOI 124.4
1 LOI is mass loss on ignition to 950 °C.
Table 2. Chemical (XRF) and mineral (QXRD) composition of the CaCO3 cement.
Table 2. Chemical (XRF) and mineral (QXRD) composition of the CaCO3 cement.
OxideWeight (%)Mineral Weight (%)
CaO55.1Vaterite99.5
SiO20Calcite0.5
Al2O30
MgO0.1
Fe2O30
SO30.4
MnO0
TiO20
P2O50
Cl0.2
LOI 144.1
1 LOI is mass loss on ignition to 950 °C.
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Hargis, C.W.; Chen, I.A.; Devenney, M.; Fernandez, M.J.; Gilliam, R.J.; Thatcher, R.P. Calcium Carbonate Cement: A Carbon Capture, Utilization, and Storage (CCUS) Technique. Materials 2021, 14, 2709. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/ma14112709

AMA Style

Hargis CW, Chen IA, Devenney M, Fernandez MJ, Gilliam RJ, Thatcher RP. Calcium Carbonate Cement: A Carbon Capture, Utilization, and Storage (CCUS) Technique. Materials. 2021; 14(11):2709. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/ma14112709

Chicago/Turabian Style

Hargis, Craig W., Irvin A. Chen, Martin Devenney, Miguel J. Fernandez, Ryan J. Gilliam, and Ryan P. Thatcher. 2021. "Calcium Carbonate Cement: A Carbon Capture, Utilization, and Storage (CCUS) Technique" Materials 14, no. 11: 2709. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/ma14112709

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