Rolfe
Adult human female
Where? Where do we find enough land to off-set the trees being cut down other places?Abdul Alhazred said:Kidding aside, if we really need to reduce CO2, why not plant a lot of trees?
Rolfe.
Where? Where do we find enough land to off-set the trees being cut down other places?Abdul Alhazred said:Kidding aside, if we really need to reduce CO2, why not plant a lot of trees?
Abdul Alhazred said:Kidding aside, if we really need to reduce CO2, why not plant a lot of trees?
I seem to remember a report saying that if the whole Brazilian rainforest were eliminated, it would not make a big difference in CO2 concentration. It would be a disaster but not in the CO2 part of it.I remember from my high school environmental class that trees are actually the least efficient at converting CO2 to O2. The most efficient I think might have been plancton
B.S said:The Mythbusters did the "tooth in the cola" thing and the tooth didn't dissolve. Just discolored.
Abdul Alhazred said:In the USA forestation has been increasing for quite some time.
Enough? I don't know.
Plankton may be a more efficient converter of CO2, but adding more plankton is problematical.
Now throw in the fact that coal powered electric plants are terribly inefficient, the logistical problems of degining a low energy CO2 trapping and compressing system, scale it all back up to real-world, then ask who is going to pay for all of this. Doesn't this proposed system sound an awful lot like a perpetual motion machine? It's taking more energy to trap the CO2 than what is generated from the coal.
The best I could find was on their fan site. It lists the results they got for the different cola tests they did.Diamond said:Link, please.
TillEulenspiegel said:Till <-- not a chemist.
Wouldn't it be feasible to use an artificial carbon cycle 1 engine instead of stack scrubbers at industrial sites. The waste is 02 and sugar , yes? I'm not sure of the energy or volumetric constraints in RE efficiency and speed, but I would think you could do some fancy molecular footwork and use the sugar with other compounds to supply ( as an adjunct ) the energy to breakdown the CO2 ?
TillEulenspiegel said:An electrochemical cell or a passive catalytic cell , both would use energy ( UV? Electricity? regents ? ) to chemically separate the carbon from the O2 with sucrose as a waste product. I have seen some reaction vessels that do this a long time ago, so I was just wondering at the scale since the concept is viable. ala fuel cell or catalytic convertor.
Bruce said:Do you have any links? I did catalyst research in graduate school. That sort of catalyst has been discussed as the "dream" catalyst by my colleagues, but to my knowledge, no one has ever discovered one.
pgwenthold said:I've seen working fuel cells with methanol, but nothing with anything more oxidized.
CO2 is a huge thermodynamic sink. I'd like to know the other reagent that might be used. For example, CO2 + water to give sucrose and oxygen is endothermic by 100 kcal/mol per CO2 If I try other alternatives, something like methanol needs 190 kcal/mol per CO2. Probably the best thing you could imagine, methane, still requires 27 kcal/mol per CO2. That's a lot of energy that has to be overcome.
Abdul Alhazred said:Kidding aside, if we really need to reduce CO2, why not plant a lot of trees?
TillEulenspiegel said:Is there no way to craft an emulation of the bio breakdown mechanism seen in plants?