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Advanced Atmospheric Carbon Capture Technology

Description du projet

La technologie qui permet de réduire les émissions de carbone

La concentration des émissions de CO2 a atteint son plus haut niveau depuis des millions d’années et menace l’écosystème mondial tout en mettant en péril les activités humaines industrielles. Le projet AACCT, financé par l’UE, vise à mettre au point une nouvelle technologie de pointe qui facilite le captage efficace du CO2 dans l’atmosphère. De ses recherches naîtra un prototype commercial autonome qui démontrera sa viabilité économique et écologique, de loin supérieure à toutes les autres approches émergentes du captage du CO2 dans l’atmosphère. La technologie d’AACCT fournira du CO2 pur qui pourra être vendu, utilisé ou transformé dans le cadre de procédés chimiques établis ou naissants. D’après des estimations, rien qu’en Irlande, son application peut favoriser une réduction des émissions de gaz à effet de serre de plus de 10 %.

Objectif

Ever increasing atmospheric CO2 concentrations and global emissions of 36 Gt/year impose unprecedented threats to the world’s ecosystem and endanger industrial human activities in their entirety. This AACCT project will establish a new advanced technology that facilitates efficient CO2 capture from air and results in a commercial, stand-alone prototype that will demonstrate its economical and ecological viability, outperforming all other emerging approaches to atmospheric CO2 capture. The technology takes advantage of unique, intrinsic micro- and macro-molecular structures of porous materials that were developed within the ERC SUPRAMOL and Science Foundation Ireland funded projects. These adsorbents reveal extraordinary affinity to CO2, are non-corrosive, non-toxic and are based on stable, cheap and abundant silica materials. The system operates in moist air whereby the CO2 recovery is facilitated at mild conditions under which the adsorbent is regenerated. These intrinsic characteristics in combination with the macro-structure of sub-millimetre pellets that enhances the ad/desorption kinetics, results in exceptionally low operational CO2 capture costs. The technology is modular and the number of capture units scales linearly with the desired CO2 quantity. It is not restricted to fixed locations or CO2 point sources and thus, can conceptionally lead to negative or net zero CO2 emissions.
The AACCT technology will provide pure CO2 that can be sold, used or transformed within established or emerging chemical processes (i.e. methanol synthesis). Initially, it is envisaged that the systems, using low-grade waste heat, will be employed in energy-intensive industrial sectors requiring air circulation and cooling devices. A very modest adaptation of the AACCT prototypes can facilitate the reduction of Ireland’s greenhouse gas emissions by >10%, thus highlighting the potential impact and scalability of the proposed technology at European and global levels.

Institution d’accueil

THE PROVOST, FELLOWS, FOUNDATION SCHOLARS & THE OTHER MEMBERS OF BOARD, OF THE COLLEGE OF THE HOLY & UNDIVIDED TRINITY OF QUEEN ELIZABETH NEAR DUBLIN
Contribution nette de l'UE
€ 150 000,00
Adresse
COLLEGE GREEN TRINITY COLLEGE
D02 CX56 DUBLIN 2
Irlande

Voir sur la carte

Région
Ireland Eastern and Midland Dublin
Type d’activité
Higher or Secondary Education Establishments
Liens
Coût total
Aucune donnée

Bénéficiaires (1)