Carbon sequestration via reaction with basaltic rocks: Geochemical modeling and experimental results
2012
Rosenbauer, Robert J. | Thomas, Burt | Bischoff, James L. | Palandri, James
Basaltic rocks are potential repositories for sequestering carbon dioxide (CO₂) because of their capacity for trapping CO₂ in carbonate minerals. We carried out a series of thermodynamic equilibrium models and high pressure experiments, reacting basalt with CO₂-charged fluids over a range of conditions from 50 to 200°C at 300bar. Results indicate basalt has a high reactivity to CO₂ acidified brine. Carbon dioxide is taken up from solution at all temperatures from 50 to 200°C, 300bar, but the maximum extent and rate of reaction occurs at 100°C, 300bar. Reaction path simulations utilizing the geochemical modeling program CHILLER predicted an equilibrium carbonate alteration assemblage of calcite, magnesite, and siderite, but the only secondary carbonate identified in the experiments was a ferroan magnesite. The amount of uptake at 100°C, 300bar ranged from 8% by weight for a typical tholeite to 26% for a picrite. The actual amount of CO₂ uptake and extent of rock alteration coincides directly with the magnesium content of the rock suggesting that overall reaction extent is controlled by bulk basalt Mg content. In terms of sequestering CO₂, an average basaltic MgO content of 8% is equivalent to 2.6×10⁸metrictonCO₂/km³ basalt.
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