Clay can be used for carbon capture

By Steinar Brandslet

Published 08.04.15

Ordinary clay can be as good as more advanced materials for capturing carbon dioxide.

Carbon capture will play a central role in helping the nations of the world manage and reduce their greenhouse gas emissions. Many materials are being tested for the purpose of capturing CO 2 . New results show that ordinary clay can work just as effectively as more advanced materials.

“It is quite remarkable that clay can capture as much CO 2 as other materials that are being investigated,” says Jon Otto Fossum, professor at the Department of Physics at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU).

Clay offers many benefits compared to other materials, particularly because other potential materials can be expensive, difficult to produce, toxic and not particularly environmentally friendly.

A possible practical future use of this discovery could be to include clays in CO 2 filters for industrial-scale CO 2 emissions reduction.

“What we are doing is basic research,” Fossum says. “It will take more research to develop the technology, so we don’t expect clay-based CO 2 capture to be readily available anytime soon.”

Published in Scientific Reports

NTNU researchers Leander Michels, a PhD candidate and Fossum led the research effort, in cooperation with researchers from the Institute for Energy Technology in Kjeller, Norway, and scientists from the Slovak University of Technology, the MaxIVLab at Lund University and the Universidade de Brasilia.

The results were recently published in Scientific Reports, a peer-reviewed journal published by the Nature Publishing Group.

Selective, reusable and inexpensive

A good material for capturing CO 2 must meet specific requirements. It should have a large surface area and good adsorbtion capability. It should be able to capture CO 2 selectively before it captures other molecules, it should not need a lot of energy for it to work, and it must be reusable. Moreover, it must be inexpensive and environmentally friendly.

Certain clay minerals meet these criteria, particularly smectite, a group of clay minerals that swell in contact with water, which are known as layered nanosilicates.

The researchers used synthetic smectite in their experiments. Artificial clays can actually be inexpensive to make.

Clay surface actively captures CO 2

The researchers found that CO 2 in gaseous form binds to smectite, and that it is not only the smectite clay surfaces in themselves that are responsible for binding CO 2 , but principally that ions associated with the clay surfaces are the active capturers.

A smectite clay called lithium-fluorohectorite can retain CO 2 at temperatures up to 35 degrees C at ambient pressure. The CO 2 that is captured by the clay is released when it is heated to temperatures above this limit, which allows CO 2 capture to be controlled.