I have wondered that and have a response but bear in mind that I am not a chemist/chemical engineer. My understanding is that even though the concentration of CO2 volumetrically is higher in the liquid phase, there is no significant energy advantage to the removal process in (sea)water. The energy consumption for mCDR will be similar to DAC. The confirmation I see for this is the energy consumption numbers that end up in the various reports, press-releases, website seem to be in the same general range. If the 150X concentration were an important process edge, surely the reported energy numbers would be dramatically different but don’t get reported that way.
John.
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Thermodynamic Geoengineering will drive DAC and DWC out of the market. It cools the surface by converting surface heat and shifting the converted heat to a depth of 1000 meters from where it returns and can be recycled. This first prevents and then reverses the offgassing of CO2 from the ocean to the atmosphere as the ocean is warmed. And is about 3 times cheaper than the consumption of fossil fuels when the IMF’s $7 trillion assessment of the environment cost of doing business burning fossil fuels is added to the true cost of the energy. Even absent the subsidies TG is cheaper.
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Thermodynamically, CO2 in the air and in the surface ocean are close to equilibrium. Therefore, the theoretical energy requirement for collecting CO2 from the ocean or the air is essentially the same. Since the ocean lags behind the air (CO2 is net flowing into the ocean), in most places there is a tiny and irrelevant advantage to collecting CO2 from the air. However, there are places where the ocean exhales CO2 and there the thermodynamic balance slightly favors ocean water.
Therefore it comes down to the question of which implementation is easier, and there is no good a priori answer to that. In terms of material one needs to sift through one in 2500 molecules in the air bore one encounters a CO2. In the ocean this ratio is
about one in 25,000. However the moles per cubic meter in the ocean is about 100 times higher than in the air. If your process depends on the mass processed, air is easier. If it depends on the volume processed ocean water is easier.
The biggest difference is the methods one might use. Ocean water lends itself to electrochemical separation which you cannot do directly in air. On the other hand, electrochemistry has not shown itself to be very energy efficient method when working with tiny electrochemical potentials.
In short, I would pay attention to both options, and not prejudge which one will turn out to be easier. You will likely see innovation on both sides.
Klaus
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Can anyone point me to a comparison of the energy input requirements per ton of CO2 removal from air via DACCS versus from seawater?It seems to me that if a life-cycle analysis were to conclude that capturing and removing carbon from seawater is inherently more energy efficient than a similar process in which carbon is removed from air, then DWCCS will eventually displace DACCS from global CDR markets entirely. I have not yet been able to find a comparison of the LCA of the two processes.
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I agree with you, Chris, that direct heat from geothermal sources (or via hot brick energy storage systems like Rondo heat batteries, for soaking up excess solar/wind renewable energy when grid demand is below power supply on sunny or windy days) could make DACCS a lot cheaper than a system with a high electricity input requirement. I still need to see detailed models of DACCS (i.e. the precise irreducible energy and materials requirements, and calculations about the geological storage capacity that will likely be accessible to any single DACCS plant without requiring transporting compressed CO2 off-site, etc.),
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