Impacts of diffusive transport on carbonate mineral formation from magnesium silicate-CO2-water reactions.
Environ Sci Technol
; 48(24): 14344-51, 2014 Dec 16.
Article
in En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-25420634
Reactions of CO2 with magnesium silicate minerals to precipitate magnesium carbonates can result in stable carbon sequestration. This process can be employed in ex situ reactors or during geologic carbon sequestration in magnesium-rich formations. The reaction of aqueous CO2 with the magnesium silicate mineral forsterite was studied in systems with transport controlled by diffusion. The approach integrated bench-scale experiments, an in situ spectroscopic technique, and reactive transport modeling. Experiments were performed using a tube packed with forsterite and open at one end to a CO2-rich solution. The location and amounts of carbonate minerals that formed were determined by postexperiment characterization of the solids. Complementing this ex situ characterization, (13)C NMR spectroscopy tracked the inorganic carbon transport and speciation in situ. The data were compared with the output of reactive transport simulations that accounted for diffusive transport processes, aqueous speciation, and the forsterite dissolution rate. All three approaches found that the onset of magnesium carbonate precipitation was spatially localized about 1 cm from the opening of the forsterite bed. Magnesite was the dominant reaction product. Geochemical gradients that developed in the diffusion-limited zones led to locally supersaturated conditions at specific locations even while the volume-averaged properties of the system remained undersaturated.
Full text:
1
Database:
MEDLINE
Main subject:
Carbon Dioxide
/
Silicon Compounds
/
Magnesium Silicates
/
Magnesium
Language:
En
Journal:
Environ Sci Technol
Year:
2014
Type:
Article
Affiliation country:
United States