scholarly journals Front Cover: Scale‐up and Sustainability Evaluation of Biopolymer Production from Citrus Waste Offering Carbon Capture and Utilisation Pathway (ChemistryOpen 6/2019)

ChemistryOpen ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (6) ◽  
pp. 657-657
Author(s):  
Alex Durkin ◽  
Ivan Taptygin ◽  
Qingyuan Kong ◽  
Mohamad F. M. Gunam Resul ◽  
Abdul Rehman ◽  
...  
ChemistryOpen ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (6) ◽  
pp. 659-659
Author(s):  
Alex Durkin ◽  
Ivan Taptygin ◽  
Qingyuan Kong ◽  
Mohamad F. M. Gunam Resul ◽  
Abdul Rehman ◽  
...  

ChemistryOpen ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (6) ◽  
pp. 668-688 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alex Durkin ◽  
Ivan Taptygin ◽  
Qingyuan Kong ◽  
Mohamad F. M. Gunam Resul ◽  
Abdul Rehman ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Marco Gazzino ◽  
Giovanni Riccio ◽  
Nicola Rossi ◽  
Giancarlo Benelli

Among possible options to capture carbon dioxide, pressurised oxy-fuel combustion is a promising one. Accordingly, Enel teamed with Itea and Enea to develop a pressurised oxy-combustion technology. Currently, extensive tests have been carried out at 4 bar on a 5 MWt facility based in Gioia del Colle (Southern Italy). By starting from the know-how gained on that scale, Enel planned to build by 2010 an experimental 48 MWt demo-plant, based on the same pressurised combustion process introduced above. This will be the necessary intermediate step for the further scale-up towards a zero emission plant of industrial scale. This paper is the prosecution of a previous publication presenting the process design and energy analysis of a power cycle integrating the developed pressurised oxy-coal combustion technology with a Rankine cycle including carbon capture. After having briefly presented the pressurised oxycombustion project carried out at Enel, the paper focuses on technology issues related to the proposed cycle and the related process integration, with respect to main components.


Author(s):  
Nick Fackler ◽  
Björn D. Heijstra ◽  
Blake J. Rasor ◽  
Hunter Brown ◽  
Jacob Martin ◽  
...  

Owing to rising levels of greenhouse gases in our atmosphere and oceans, climate change poses significant environmental, economic, and social challenges globally. Technologies that enable carbon capture and conversion of greenhouse gases into useful products will help mitigate climate change by enabling a new circular carbon economy. Gas fermentation using carbon-fixing microorganisms offers an economically viable and scalable solution with unique feedstock and product flexibility that has been commercialized recently. We review the state of the art of gas fermentation and discuss opportunities to accelerate future development and rollout. We discuss the current commercial process for conversion of waste gases to ethanol, including the underlying biology, challenges in process scale-up, and progress on genetic tool development and metabolic engineering to expand the product spectrum. We emphasize key enabling technologies to accelerate strain development for acetogens and other nonmodel organisms. Expected final online publication date for the Annual Review of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, Volume 12 is June 2021. Please see http://www.annualreviews.org/page/journal/pubdates for revised estimates.


2018 ◽  
Vol 232 ◽  
pp. 527-542 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sadegh Seddighi ◽  
Peter T. Clough ◽  
Edward J. Anthony ◽  
Robin W. Hughes ◽  
Ping Lu

2021 ◽  
Vol 3 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eve Tamme ◽  
Larissa Lee Beck

Over the past two years, the European Union, Norway, Iceland, and the UK have increased climate ambition and aggressively pushed forward an agenda to pursue climate neutrality or net-zero emissions by mid-century. This increased ambition, partly the result of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change's landmark findings on limiting global warming to 1.5°C, has also led to a renewed approach to and revitalized debate about the role of carbon capture and storage and carbon dioxide removal. With increasing climate ambition, including a mid-century climate neutrality goal for the whole European Union, the potential role of technological carbon dioxide removal (CDR) is emerging as one of the critical points of debate among NGOs, policymakers, and the private sector. Policymakers are starting to discuss how to incentivize a CDR scale-up. What encompasses the current debate, and how does it relate to CDR technologies' expected role in reaching climate neutrality? This perspective will highlight that policy must fill two gaps: the accounting and the commercialization gap for the near-term development of a comprehensive CDR policy framework. It will shine a light on the current status of negative emission technologies and the role of carbon capture and storage in delivering negative emissions in Europe's decarbonized future. It will also analyze the role of carbon markets, including voluntary markets, as potential incentives while exploring policy pathways for a near-term scale-up.


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