不良研究所

Storing Carbon in Buildings Could Help Address Climate Change

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A large building under construction with open concrete beams visible above a glass wall. People wearing hard hats stand in the middle distance.
Building materials such as concrete have the potential to store billions of tons of carbon dioxide away from the atmosphere, according to a new study from 不良研究所. Image shows 不良研究所 Aggie Square under construction at the Sacramento campus in May, 2023 (不良研究所 photo).

Construction materials such as concrete and plastic have the potential to lock away billions of tons of carbon dioxide, according to a new study by civil engineers and earth systems scientists at the 不良研究所 and Stanford University. The study, published Jan. 10 in , shows that combined with steps to decarbonize the economy, storing CO2 in buildings could help the world achieve goals for reducing greenhouse gas emissions. 

鈥淭he potential is pretty large,鈥 said Elisabeth Van Roijen, who led the study as a graduate student at 不良研究所. 

The goal of carbon sequestration is to take carbon dioxide, either from where it is being produced or from the atmosphere, convert it into a stable form and store it away from the atmosphere where it cannot contribute to climate change. Proposed schemes have involved, for example, injecting carbon underground or storing it in the deep ocean. These approaches pose both practical challenges and environmental risks. 

鈥淲hat if, instead, we can leverage materials that we already produce in large quantities to store carbon?鈥 Van Roijen said. 

Working with Sabbie Miller, associate professor of civil and environmental engineering at 不良研究所, and Steve Davis at Stanford University, Van Roijen calculated the potential to store carbon in a wide range of common building materials including concrete (cement and aggregates), asphalt, plastics, wood and brick. 

More than 30 billion tons of conventional versions of these materials are produced worldwide every year.

Concrete potential

The carbon-storing approaches studied included adding biochar (made by heating waste biomass) into concrete; using artificial rocks that can be loaded with carbon as concrete and asphalt pavement aggregate; plastics and asphalt binders based on biomass rather than fossil petroleum sources; and including biomass fiber into bricks. These technologies are at different stages of readiness, with some still being investigated at a lab or pilot scale and others already available for adoption.

Grey cube with black inclusions next to a pile of black chunky material.
Concrete made with biochar (heat-treated biomass). Sabbie Miller, 不良研究所

Researchers found that while bio-based plastics could take up the largest amount of carbon by weight, by far the largest potential for carbon storage is in using carbonated aggregates to make concrete. That鈥檚 because concrete is by far the world鈥檚 most popular building material: Over 20 billion tons are produced every year. 

鈥淚f feasible, a little bit of storage in concrete could go a long way,鈥 Miller said. The team calculated that if 10% of the world鈥檚 concrete aggregate production were carbonateable, it could absorb a gigaton of CO2.   

The feedstocks for these new processes for making building materials are mostly low-value waste materials such as biomass, Van Roijen said. Implementing these new processes would enhance their value, creating economic development and promoting a circular economy, she said. 

Some technology development is needed, particularly in cases where material performance and net-storage potential of individual manufacturing methods must be validated. However, many of these technologies are just waiting to be adopted, Miller said. 

Van Roijen is now a researcher at the U.S. Department of Energy National Renewable Energy Laboratory. The work was supported by Miller鈥檚 CAREER grant from the National Science Foundation. 

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