New process gets common rocks to trap carbon rapidly, cheaply
SMRTR summary
Stanford chemists have developed a low-cost method to permanently remove atmospheric CO2 using heat-transformed minerals that rapidly absorb carbon. The process, inspired by cement production, converts common silicates into reactive materials that can be spread over large areas or added to agricultural soil, potentially removing one ton of CO2 per ton of material produced.
SMRTR provides this summary for quick context. The original article belongs to Science Daily.
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