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Capturing CO2 with E. coli enzymes

I’ve got a piece in Technology Review about a Quebec City-based company called CO2 Solution, which has developed a bioreactor for capturing CO2 from power plants and industrial facilities. At the heart of the reactor is an enzyme — extracted from genetically engineered E. coli but also present in all animals — that can absorb CO2 and convert it into bicarbonate. The bicarbonate-rich solution is then removed and the bicarbonate ions can be extracted for making everything from baking powder (sodium bicarbonate) to calcium carbonate (limestone). Alternatively, concentrated CO2 can be taken out of the solution and pumped into geological storage.

There are obviously plenty of alternatives for capturing CO2 from industrial and power-plant flue stacks, but separating the CO2 stream from other gases and pollutants makes most of these approaches energy-intensive and therefore quite costly. One of the oldest methods is to absorb the CO2 using a chemical solvent such as monoethanol amine, but it remains an expensive approach and requires significant pre-scrubbing of the gases.

Other options include cryogenic separation (complex and vulnerable to contamination), membrane separation (requires flue gas pressure and CO2 concentrations not characteristic of power plants), and absorption through porous solids such as alumina and activated-carbon (very energy-intensive to extract CO2 from solid afterwards).

Another, more recent method being tested in coal plants is to combust the fuel in a pure oxygen environment. The so-called oxyfuel approach achieves a high, almost pure concentration of CO2 with trace pollutants. But again, pre-separating pure oxygen from the air takes a lot of energy that drives up the cost. That said, power-plant equipment providers such as Babcock and Wilcox see potential in oxygen combustion, and at least two pilot plants — a Vattenfall lignite-fired coal plant in Germany and a Saskpower “clean coal” demonstration plant in Canada — hope to be the first to use the approach commercially.

Let us not forget CO2 capture for coal plants based on gasification, which turns coal into a synthetic gas made of carbon monoxide and hydrogen. Using steam and some catalysts that syngas can be made into hydrogen and CO2. The hydrogen is combusted in a gas turbine to generate electricity and the CO2 stream is easily separated. Unfortunately, the design of a gasification plant is generally considered 20 per cent more expensive than a conventional plant.

Of interest is that Babcock and Wilcox is working closely with CO2 Solution on its enzyme-based carbon-capture technology, which appears to be unique in the market. Babcock said it wants to broaden its porfolio of carbon-capture options and could see itself licensing the technology from CO2 Solution, assuming the company can drive down the price of its process. Development of the enzyme approach is still embryonic, but obviously has great potential given the interest from a major player such as Babock.

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This entry was posted on Thursday, February 22nd, 2007 at 11:57 am and is filed under Main Page. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.

5 Responses to “Capturing CO2 with E. coli enzymes”

  1. Anonymous Says:
    February 22nd, 2007 at 6:58 pm

    I doubt this – or greenfuel’s algae capture process – has much potential at all. Do you realize the massive quantities and rates of CO2 that are emitted by a decent-sized power plant? No biological process is fast enough to capture those kinds of quantities unless you spread the biological agent over hundreds if not thousands of square miles. And, that’s just the tip of the iceberg of problems you would face. It’s nice to dream though.

  2. Anonymous Says:
    February 22nd, 2007 at 9:29 pm

    You mean it’s very important to dream…

  3. Anonymous Says:
    February 23rd, 2007 at 2:39 am

    May I suggest a slogan that’s posted in nearby Liege, Belgium: ‘Forcer l’avenir’.

    Which means so much as ‘Don’t wait until heaven descends on earth, but be a part of making that happen’.

    There’s much we can do now:

    - meditate

    - choose life with our consumer behavior

    - be honest and courageous with ourselves

    - be honest and courageous when a naked emperor comes by

    - team up with like minded people

    - inspire others by following your heart

    Cheers,

    Emil M

  4. Anonymous Says:
    February 23rd, 2007 at 11:31 am

    Carbonic anhydrase is an amazing enzyme. I wonder if they could trap it at the interface of a bipolar membrane (a membrane consisting of anion and cation-permeable membranes bonded together). If so, they might be able to make an electrodialysis stack that converts salt water plus CO2 into separate sodium bicarbonate and hydrochloric acid solutions. Neutralize the acid on olivine and you’ve sequestered the CO2 in the bicarbonate.

  5. Anonymous Says:
    February 23rd, 2007 at 2:38 pm

    No biological process is fast enough to capture those kinds of quantities unless you spread the biological agent over hundreds if not thousands of square miles.

    Carbonic anhydrases are among the most active enzymes known. The turnover rate can be as high as 1 million reactions per enzyme molecule per second. At this rate, the entire CO2 output of a 1 GW(e) coal plant could be reacted by less than a mole of protein.

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