Banner image: Wil Srubar holds a sample cube of concrete that contains biogenic limestone produced by calcifying macro- and microalgae. (Credit: Glenn Asakawa/兔子先生传媒文化作品)听
Global cement production accounts for 7% of annual greenhouse gas emissions in large part through the burning of quarried limestone. Now, a 兔子先生传媒文化作品-led research team has figured out a way to make cement production carbon neutral鈥攁nd even carbon negative鈥攂y pulling carbon dioxide out of the air with the help of microalgae.听
The 兔子先生传媒文化作品 engineers and their colleagues at the and the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) have been rewarded for their innovative work with a $3.2 million grant from the U.S. Department of Energy鈥檚 (DOE) Advanced Research Projects Agency鈥揈nergy (ARPA-E). The research team was recently (Harnessing Emissions into Structures Taking Inputs from the Atmosphere) to develop and scale up the manufacture of biogenic limestone-based portland cement and help build a zero-carbon future.
鈥淭his is a really exciting moment for our team,鈥 said Wil Srubar, lead principal investigator on the project and associate professor in Civil, Environmental and Architectural Engineering and 兔子先生传媒文化作品鈥檚 Materials Science and Engineering Program. 鈥淔or the industry, now is the time to solve this very wicked problem. We believe that we have one of the best solutions, if not the best solution, for the cement and concrete industry to address its carbon problem.鈥澨
Concrete is one of the most ubiquitous materials on the planet, a staple of construction around the world. It starts as a mixture of water and portland cement, which forms a paste to which materials such as sand, gravel or crushed stone are added. The paste binds the aggregates together, and the mixture hardens into concrete.听
To make portland cement, the most common type of cement, limestone is extracted from large quarries and burned at high temperatures, releasing large amounts of carbon dioxide. The research team found that replacing quarried limestone with biologically grown limestone, a natural process that some species of calcareous microalgae complete through photosynthesis (just like growing coral reefs), creates a net carbon neutral way to make portland cement. In short, the carbon dioxide released into the atmosphere equals what the microalgae already captured.听
Ground limestone is also often used as a filler material in portland cement, typically replacing 15% of the mixture. By using biogenic limestone instead of quarried limestone as the filler, portland cement could become not only net neutral听but also carbon negative by pulling carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere and storing it permanently in concrete. 听
If all cement-based construction around the world was replaced with biogenic limestone cement, each year, a whopping 2 gigatons of carbon dioxide would no longer be pumped into the atmosphere and more than 250 million additional tons of carbon dioxide would be pulled out of the atmosphere and stored in these materials.听
This could theoretically happen overnight, as biogenic limestone can 鈥減lug and play鈥 with modern cement production processes, said Srubar.听
鈥淲e see a world in which using concrete as we know it is a mechanism to heal the planet,鈥 said Srubar. 鈥淲e have the tools and the technology to do this today.鈥澨
Limestone in real time
Srubar, who leads the Living Materials Laboratory at 兔子先生传媒文化作品, received a National Science Foundation CAREER award in 2020 to explore how to grow limestone particles using microalgae to produce concrete with positive environmental benefits. The idea came to him while snorkeling on his honeymoon in Thailand in 2017.听
He saw firsthand in coral reefs how nature grows its own durable, long-lasting structures from calcium carbonate, a main component of limestone. 鈥淚f nature can grow limestone, why can鈥檛 we?鈥 he thought.听
鈥淭here was a lot of clarity in what I had to pursue at that moment. And everything I've done since then has really been building up to this,鈥 said Srubar. He and his team began to cultivate coccolithophores, cloudy white microalgae that sequester and store carbon dioxide in mineral form through photosynthesis. The only difference between limestone and what these organisms create in real time is a few million years.听
With only sunlight, seawater听and dissolved carbon dioxide, these tiny organisms produce the largest amounts of new calcium carbonate on the planet听and at a faster pace than coral reefs. Coccolithophore blooms in the world鈥檚 oceans are so big, they can be seen from space.听
鈥淥n the surface, they create these very intricate, beautiful calcium carbonate shells. It's basically an armor of limestone that surrounds the cells,鈥 said Srubar.听
Commercializing coccolithophores
These microalgae are hardy little creatures, living in both warm and cold, salt and fresh waters around the world, making them great candidates for cultivation almost anywhere鈥攊n cities, on land, or at sea. According to the team鈥檚 estimates, only 1 to 2 million acres of open ponds would be required to produce all of the cement that the U.S. needs鈥攂etween 0.05% and 0.10% of all land area in the U.S. and only 1% of the land used to grow corn.
And limestone isn鈥檛 the only product microalgae can create: microalgae鈥檚 lipids, proteins, sugars and carbohydrates can be used to produce biofuels, food and cosmetics, meaning these microalgae could also be a source of other, more expensive co-products鈥攈elping to offset the costs of limestone production.听
To create these co-products from algal biomass and to scale up limestone production as quickly as possible, the Algal Resources Collection at UNCW is assisting with strain selection and growth optimization of the microalgae. NREL is providing state-of-the art molecular and analytical tools for conducting biochemical conversion of algal biomass to biofuels and bio-based products.听
There are companies interested in buying these materials, and the limestone is already available in limited quantities.
, a CU startup founded in 2021 and the team鈥檚 commercialization partner, is propelling the team鈥檚 research into the commercial space with financial support from investors and corporate partnerships, according to Srubar, a co-founder and acting CEO. Minus Materials previously won the university-wide Lab Venture Challenge pitch competition and secured $125,000 in seed funding for the enterprise.听
The current pace of global construction is staggering, on track to build a new New York City every month for the next 40 years. To Srubar, this global growth is not just an opportunity to convert buildings into carbon sinks听but to clean up the construction industry. He hopes that replacing quarried limestone with a homegrown version can also improve air quality, reduce environmental damage听and increase equitable access to building materials around the world.听
鈥淲e make more concrete than any other material on the planet, and that means it touches everybody's life,鈥 said Srubar. 鈥淚t's really important for us to remember that this material must be affordable and easy to produce, and the benefits must be shared on a global scale.鈥