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The future of storing CO2 and methane: ‘dry water?’

By | August 27, 2010, 4:00 AM PDT

A fine powder raised hopes in cosmetic industries in 1968when it was discovered. Its promise dulled. But “dry water” is back, showing potential for many uses, among them storing carbon dioxide and methane. So say British scientists speaking this week at an American Chemical Society meeting in Boston.

The seemingly oxymoronic term “dry water” is 95 percent water. But silica coats each water molecule, preventing them from bonding together and becoming liquid. The water molecules within each powder particle, however, can still chemically combine with gases and form hydrates.

Since the powder’s sponge-like power applies to greenhouse gases, researchers from the University of Hull and University of Liverpool suggest we might one day enlist dry water in the fight against global warming. In the lab, the powder can absorb three times as much CO2 as separated silica and water.

Methane, an even stronger greenhouse gas, could theoretically team up with dry water to facilitate its use as an energy source. The powder may make capturing and delivering methane easier.

In a previous statement, Chemist Andy Cooper of the University of Liverpool says:

Many natural gas reserves are geographically remote and can only be extracted via pipelines, so there is a need to look for other ways to transport the gas. It has been suggested that methane gas hydrate could be used as a way of containing methane gas for transportation. The disadvantage of methane gas hydrate for industry use is that it is formed at a very slow rate when methane reacts with water under pressure.

To counteract these difficulties we used a method to break water up into tiny droplets to increase the surface area in contact with the gas. We did this by mixing water with a special form of silica – a similar material to sand – which stops the water droplets from coalescing.

Tapping and transporting naturally occurring methane hydrate or ‘frozen methane’ resources, however, could possibly benefit from the powder. The United States has been investigating such deposits in Alaska’s North Slope and in the Gulf of Mexico (see: Energy on the rocks: is combustible ice in our future?).

The chemists also have the safe storage of methane for fueling gas-powered cars in mind for the powder, though they say much more research is needed. Dry water’s future applications might also include transporting harmful industrial liquids, producing more energy-efficient products through the powder’s ability to kickstart chemical reactions, and back to cosmetics: a cooling, exfoliating moisturizer.

Image: Ben Carter

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Melissa Mahony

About Melissa Mahony

Melissa Mahony was a contributing editor for SmartPlanet from 2010 to 2011.

Melissa Mahony

Melissa Mahony

Contributing Editor, Energy

Melissa Mahony has written for Scientific American Mind, Audubon Magazine, Plenty Magazine and LiveScience. Formerly, she was an editor at Wildlife Conservation magazine. She holds degrees from Boston College and New York University's Science, Health, and Environmental Reporting Program. She is based in New York.

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Melissa Mahony

Melissa Mahony

Melissa does not have financial holdings that would influence how or what she covers. She currently works for the Wildlife Conservation Society as an editor. Should Melissa cover a topic in which the WCS is involved, she will disclose this fact in her writing.

She writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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RE: The future of storing CO2 and methane: 'dry water?'
I am not thrilled by the prospect of people trying to use methane clathrates as a power source. The first big industrial accident could spill enough methane into the air to undo ALL the progress we will have made in the fight against global warming. Methane is that much more potent a greenhouse gas than CO2.

And yes, we really should expect such an accident if the industry tries to mine the clathrates currently safe under water. No one should doubt that after the fiasco of the Deepwater Horizon in the Gulf of Mexico so recently.
Posted by mejohnsn
27th Aug 2010
+1 Vote
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RE: The future of storing CO2 and methane: 'dry water?'
Is this the stuff we used to call rat water? You know, you pack it with the rats and they arrive at their destination well hydrated and with the white block of "rat water" gone?

Just curious, always wondered what that stuff was made of, it looked more like styrofoam than anything else.
Posted by IMWeira
27th Aug 2010
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RE: The future of storing CO2 and methane: 'dry water?'
Aren't these methane clathrate beds the same ones that have already begun to outgas due to the rise in ocean and air temps up north? Aren't these the same beds that, if released in large quantities, will tip the greenhouse gases from a significant problem to a catastrophic problem that could take centuries to reverse?

I don't see how this technology could be used to sequester the methane, since its goal is to foster the smooth release of methane. Doesn't address the huge problem, rather it exploits the situation for short term gains. Seems to me that this is akin to developing a windmill to power a flashlight held by the guy who was riding the atomic bomb down to the ground in Dr. Strangelove. Gallows technology?
Posted by klassman6
28th Aug 2010
+1 Vote
+ -
RE: The future of storing CO2 and methane: 'dry water?'
Although capturing methane, perhaps for extraction as an energy souce, presumably emanaing from landfill or melting Permafrost is laudible and stopping it escaping into the atmosphere....storing CO2 is just the most barking mad scheme I have ever heard of.

Perhaps I need to head down the Patent office and be first to register my bio-organic solution/method which absorbs CO2 and compacts it into a permenant solid storage format, that needs no particularly special storage or containment.

My new invention is called................

a frigging tree !!!

Plant hundreds and hundreds of billions and billions of the things across the planet, and you have an immediate massive new carbon sink.

CO2 storage, lord help us from the mad scientists.,
Posted by neilpost
28th Aug 2010
+1 Vote
+ -
RE: The future of storing CO2 and methane: 'dry water?'
neilpost:
Thank God someone finally stated the obvious. The notion of sequestering the very thing that supports photosynthesis and the production of breathable oxygen (and therefor supports all life on this planet) is beyond ridiculous.
Maybe all of these PHD folks simply forgot basic high school science and have their heads (and political agenda) in a different place.
Posted by RCBeltz
28th Aug 2010
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