This concrete traps CO2 emissions forever | Mission Ahead
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- čas přidán 31. 07. 2018
- Concrete's main ingredient is responsible for 7% of global man-made greenhouse gas emissions. CarbonCure has figured out how to trap CO2 in concrete and make it stronger in the process.
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Concrete here concrete there concrete everywhere...
quantum chicken - damnit, now there is concrete in my green eggs n ham !!
everybody is friends with everybody
@@logankincade661 random=funny
Can you be a bit more concrete?
So do trees
They are working on that too. CLT, Cross Laminated Timber is being used to build skyscrapers now. The building codes are being updated so it can be used more widely.
A major university, I think MIT, is also working on dissolving wood way and leaving some sort of crystal structure behind that is much stronger than steel.
yeah i know right. Buildings provide homes and jobs, what do trees give us? Just the oxygen we need to be alive!!!
Stuff: Plus tree free streets gets blistering hot during summer, and soil without tress eventually turns into a fine dust. Most cities severely lack plants and trees, and it influences everything from long term habitability to mental health.
Thank you!
Trees produce less than 1/3 of the planet’s oxygen. Not saying we don’t need them. Just sayin :)
This is the type of reporting we need. Real problems, real solutions
Yes, if it is true.
This reporter behaves more like a model.
Their jobs are similar: to attract and retain an audience.
Its CNN, what do you expect?
I see a big mistake or forget. Where the CO2 come from? From the process of making cement.
If not. It’s useless...
finally a comment that read my mind, I feel like this is a big prank on everyone
Thanks *Bro'* !
No, it's entirely irrelevant where it came from unless it was produced specifically for this, which it wasn't. CO2 is captured from other industrial processes for use in a variety of things.
Co2 was captured while burning coal to make electricity. it could be carbon negative if concreate was made with a sustainable energy source and then add C02
This is awesome! Saw the scientist that created this a few years ago, it’s finally being used.
should be more worried about the sand issue can't just use any type of sand to make concrete
Do you think crushing the round sand can make it jagged enough to use for concrete
Cant just use any water either 👀
We are running out of sand and unfortunately its an issue that isn't really talked about much.This video explains it perfectly: czcams.com/video/E0jfn61FTGQ/video.html
Volcanic ash my friend little to no sand when useing volcanic concrete there a reason why romans building lasted 2000 years and modern concrete cant last 50 years
Jaggsta
ayyy ive seen that sand video too bud!
3:25 Is that a pothole? Outside a concrete factory?
Wow, very cool. Thanks for the report! Great job all the way around. Topic was amazing. Reporter did a awesome job as well. A++
This should come as law for everyone making concrete and government should help these companies to get necessary technology to do this
This is so amazing!👌🏻
excellent work
How do they source their c02
Concretors. ...we will lay anything.
Great report; thanks!
So what happens when the buildings have to come down does the C02 get released then 🤷🏼♂️🤷🏼♂️🤷🏼♂️
Great job thank you for all this work. Great job everyone, for tomorrow
It's amazing we haven't found/invented a synthetic cement replacement yet.
This is really cool. It should be adopted widely if we want a little extra time on this planet to help figure out how to save us from ourselves.
sounds like another way to jack up the price on concrete.
Jaydaytoday Jayjay didn't you hear, the prices equal themselves out pretty well
Obviously you weren't actually listening and literally just waiting to make something bad out of this. Even if the concretes price goes up a little bit because of the process, it's worth it.
phuck ewe yeah it does cars don’t cost as much as they used to, same with TVs, Plane Travel I mean probably loads of other areas even in smart phone s
Well the price doesnt go down because they give you more/better for the same price
No, if the prices increased they'd go out of business when their competitors didn't do the same thing.
I think she peed herself there lol
She sharted too.
My up
Wouldn't the alkalinity decreases due to presence of CO2 thus increasing the chances of rusting
ishan agrawal yeah, but passivation occurs pretty quickly as it sets so that isn't a problem.
No, actually. The CO2 is consumed sufficiently in the process that it doesn't affect alkalinity.
Absolutely genius!!! This is brilliant! We need more innovation like this!
2:36 ok she just peed.
Badhon& Mike what?
B Mac ok and, she didn’t pee in the video
MrAsiann how do you know, it's under her pants
Anthony James no way, where is it.
She could pee on me
Whats the shear strength impact?
Not that this doesn't help, but we need to use hempcrete. Is there any way to combine the two? Since hempcrete already has a net negative.
No.
Hempcrete is not structural, it still needs to be encased in lumber or concrete. It is renewable, rot resistant, fire resistant, etc. though.
I was skeptical with the CO2 emissions, but "increases the compressive stress with lesser concrete" 😱 oh boy you have me!😍😘😍
Basically it just speeds up the carbonation of concrete, getting you strength today that would take 50 years, meaning you can use less cement.
@@seigeengine imagine if you add flash graphene into the mix too.
that's really nice to hear :)
Year 2021, update on this pls
Amazing
Good work
long term may be kinda bad. what happens when the concrete degrades will it leech out? or does it chemically bond with the materials?
wow okay this is my final year project . Hope for the best .
@Thunderf00t what do you think about this one??
This is awesome 👍👍
Does this allow a house to reflect back the heat observed during the day time
So do you will change concrete on/in coal factories?
Well, what's the new compressive strength? And is stronger also more brittle? There are a lot of questions here to me...
I am sure the concrete cures more quickly but I doubt the other claim, that it is carbon negative.
The beneficial point of the product :
Less cement needed = less heating energy needed for production = less CO2 in the end.
Faster carbonation by CO2 injection system = no time to feel the heat of on going circulated CO2.
The natural carbonation will take about 30 years until it's neutral, but on those 30 years how many building will be build? How many CO2 will be emit? The absorbtion process way way more small than the emition, so the CO2 from concrete over the world will be circulated forever but from different buildings time to time.
cool
HempCrete plz.
Hempcrete is not a structural material tho.
Who else jumped in your seat on the slow motion butt shot. I was like yassssssss🤩
Good job!
"This is the brains of the beast here"
That's just great innovation
awesome reporter, keep doing this amazing job, she looks very inside into this subject, natural way
She just tried not looking dumb...
She just repeated what carbon cure told her... She didn't do her job. She just gave carbon cure free advertising.
Unmannedair Exactly - this was just an advertisement. See my comment above for the facts and figures.
I wasn’t aware we had tests that determine something lasts “forever”.
An impressive technology.
Huh.. We tried it at csc.. and still going to try it. And .. 2646.. yup.. that was my truck for a while in sc.
what a great advancement , but I found it curious that in the concrete placing part of the video that the steel reinforcement was left laying on the soil instead of being elevated and fully immersed by the concrete , not only will it eventually rust away but serves no purpose if not placed at a height to handle the slabs tension
Of all uses for CO2, I will place my bet on CO2 to concrete...it can scale, it develops something monetizable and it locks CO2 for a long, long time...
Good going CarbonCure, all the best
Concrete does pull CO2 out of the air to cure and harden over a short period of time. This is the chemical concept in concrete structures. As time goes on other chemicals can penetrate into the concrete and weaken it or even toughen it even more. This "technology" is not affecting the net carbon output, it simply introduces it at an early stage, probably increasing costs, adding to the handling protocols and not necessarily improving the quality of the product.
I noticed they addressed the compressive strength and didn't mention the shear strength. Interesting..
Not really.
cool stuff
@thunderf00t can you pls review this
I need to work for them.
How does the concrete hold up over time?
Best Idea..!!!
Not only does this diminish CO2 levels in our atmosphere, but this will also help with sand mining. Sand makes up around 70% of concrete and with the mass amounts of concrete being produced, sand mining has become a huge industry. What makes this CO2-concrete mixture so phenomenal is the fact that it turns the CO2 into a particle that replaces some of the sand within the mix. Hopefully, this technology will advance so far that it'll end up replacing most of the sand within the concrete so that humans don't destroy animal's natural habitats and in-turn making an unpolluted environment due to the dwindling CO2 levels from this process.
and ... how it will behave in case of fire in the building?
WE NEED MORE TREES!
I feel like it would be harder to finish with lower amounts of cement
Good
$money$ it has to save a significant amount of money. What present of concrete emissions are from the us?
Where is the mention about the C02 released when the Limestone is Kilned to make cement in the first place? duh.
It's a big deal here in Coachella Valley California, as hot as Death Valley. Far too much concrete is used, external to buildings and no one has this tech that I know of. Time to call around and find out more.
Fun fact: if all urban spaces were made white, that would reflect enough light back into space to entirely counter-act global warming.
Wow! that blouse is open pretty low
So... muslim?
Give these people a Nobel prize
So if the manufacture of concrete powder is what produces said CO2 emissions, how much is produced when converting CO2 into a mineral? Besides that, if you can capture, convert & reintegrate the CO2 into the final product then why not add even more then you started with so your not just breaking even?
... none. Because that's not how it works.
No steel reinforcement would still be used in concrete even if this wasn’t the case. There’s a lot more to it than that. I would say they’re principally pared together because generally concrete is good in compression, but bad in tension, and steel is good in tension, but bad in compression. Having the same coefficient of expansion is just neat even if it wasn’t the case I’d imagine that it would be ignored for 90% of the time because it the difference in expansion and contraction would be too small to matter. In fact steel reinforcement does expand as it corrodes and is one of the causes for chunks of concrete that you may see flake off the other is salt which promotes a chemical reaction in the concrete called secondary ettringite formation.
Why is the host modelling herself @ 5:39?
What's her correlation to concrete other than her covering the topic?
I love it.
1:30 cement doesn't hold up "skyscrapors" lol
only time is forever
Has this technology been independently tested and verified? I think this is a wool pulling exercise.
Let's see if they really want to see change....
Are they willing to lease out the patent for wider distribution?
Or are they trying to create a monopoly on from what we can see is a good step forward.
I'm proud of my carbon footprint!
How do the suppliers get the CO2 into the tanks then delivered in those tanks? What you will find with most ideas like this is that they create the same or more CO2 in the beginning process sequestering the CO2.
The CO2 is produced by other industrial processes as a waste product, captured, then sold to recoup costs. It was going to be produced one way or the other.
Where does the concrete come from and what is the difference between concrete and cement?
Okay. So cement is a binder used in concrete.
Concrete is a combination of a binder (cement) and aggregate. Aggregate is basically rocks of various sizes. Sand is used as very small rocks. The rocks are cheaper, and the various sizes cause them to lock together and bind up. The cement stops the rocks from falling apart.
Cement can be made of various things, but most commonly it's predominantly made of limestone. Limestone is roasted at very high temperatures, which releases the CO2 trapped in it. When the resulting material is ground into a powder and mixed with water, it forms hydrates, or stone. Gradually that stone reacts with CO2 in the air to reform limestone, although this happens over decades. This strengthens the concrete.
This process works by speeding up that carbonation, forming limestone more quickly, meaning you can use less cement to get the same strength. After all, we can't build things based on how strong they might be in 50 years.
This is definitely beneficial in the now. Regular concrete does absorb an equivalent carbon dioxide in its lifetime however. It`s called carbonation and all concrete undergoes the process, the only gain is having the immediate effect instead of the concretes 100+ year lifetime. more technical details etc.. its all nuanced
Daniel Mc Sween All the CO2 in the atmosphere will eventually become coal and oil again. The whole thing with CO2 is all about now.
mhmm, you`re right. The CO2 is having effects now, and this will directly mitigate the effects. The 100 yrs is still fairly quick and combined with pro`s and cons of each, regular concrete will continue to always have it`s place.
+Daniel Mc Sween Yes, and this has the benefit that we can't design structures based on how strong they might be in 100 years, so by using this we can use less binder, which is where the savings are. Additionally, this causes uniform formation of the carbonates, whereas the natural process occurs from the outside in, and that non-uniformity can cause stresses on the concrete.
+E'raan Lue Sort of but not really. One of the reasons we have all this coal is because the plants it's made of existed at a time before there were organisms well adapted to break down their tissue. These days, almost all plant matter is digested before it can be sequestered underground.
wow, thanks seigeengine. I think i understand better now. Cheers mate.
@@seigeengine ty
1 step forward 1 step back 1 step forward 2 steps back. Great job
How do they supply the CO2. How can they extract it out of the atmosphere.
They capture it at industrial sites that are producing it.
time to buy some stock
Skepticism is on. How can you store gas in a solid while mixing and especially during curing period. Unless the entire conrete slab is fully cover in pressurized co2 during the entire curing stage.
Have you never experienced a liquid with gas bubbles trapped in it? It's entirely possible, especially with more viscous liquids.
@@seigeengine extreme viscous perhaps. Cement mix isn't
The gas isn’t being stored as a gas. It ibecomrs chemically part of the solid that holds the sand and gravel together.
What would plans breathe?
European beer makers would kill for that CO2 right now.
At some point in the video, I expect Johnny Sins to appear.
So they save money in the long run but it equals out ?
Sounds like a good excuse to cut back on portland
This is awesome! Also cool to this Swedish concrete company be in the forefront
So they are using CO2 to harden the concrete, but are they still producing CO2 when they manufacture the Portland cement?
I vision tha formula !!
Do U realize trees use co2?
Can't get concrete around here unless you're a contractor.
Why dont we just pour concrete into factory chimneys? 🤔🤔
Good idea. However, will the CO2 be released again when the mechanical use of for example roads destroys the material?
The creation of cement releases CO2 -- and we need more ... czcams.com/video/RLnQo8l-BHc/video.html
If I'm understanding the video correctly, the CO2 is converted into a mineral during this process, and so the Ferrock breaking down doesn't re-release the CO2
Is this a 6 min AD?
Ultimately it all comes to the bottom line.
Is there any scientific explanation on the fundamental process of the way that how the concreat traps carbon dioxide
Yes. It reacts to form calcium carbonate.
So why can't we blend it with a polymer or ceramic and produce faux marble/stone building supplies? Throw in mica and it would look great as floor tiles.
You can?