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Oct 17, 9 tweets

🚨Scientists built a device that captures carbon from the seawater and turns it into biodegradable plastic, using bacteria as a living bioreactor.

#CDR #mCDR #CarbonDioxideRemoval #Bioplastics

DETAILS🧵1/8

2/ The system comprises 3 components:

1️⃣ C extraction

Traditional seawater electrolysis systems often fail within hours due to mineral buildup

To solve this, researchers designed a solid-state electrolysis unit that isolates sensitive ions using membranes & a solid electrolyte

3/ The modified design acidifies H2O, converting dissolved C (mainly bicarbonate & carbonate ions) into CO₂ gas for collection.

The prototype operated continuously for 22 days, processing 177 liters of seawater & extracting 6.54L of CO₂, with an energy use of 3 kWh/kg of CO₂.

4/ 2️⃣ Chemical conversion

The recovered CO₂ was catalytically converted into formic acid with over 90% selectivity.

Formic acid serves as a suitable intermediate for microbial processes.

5/ 3️⃣ Biological synthesis

Scientists engineered Vibrio natriegens, one of the fastest-growing marine bacteria, to use formic acid as its only C source.

When fed ocean-derived formic acid, it produced succinic acid, a key ingredient for biodegradable plastics & pharmaceuticals

6/ Summary of the process:

Seawater → CO₂ extraction → CO₂ → formic acid → engineered microbes → succinic acid (bioplastic precursor)

According to researchers, the system is net -ve, it removes CO2, turns it into a useful product & leaves seawater ready to absorb more.

7/ According to the study, the system could operate at an estimated cost of $230 per ton of CO₂, a range comparable to other capture technologies.

Further work will be needed to improve reactor durability and assess large-scale feasibility, according to the study.

📝For more details, read the study entitled "Efficient and scalable upcycling of oceanic carbon sources into bioplastic monomers" here:


#OceanCarbonCapture #CarbonRemoval #ClimateTech #Bioplastics #Research

🧵8/8 nature.com/articles/s4192…

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