Environmental Research Letters (Jan 2019)

Mitigating CO2 emissions of concrete manufacturing through CO2-enabled binder reduction

  • Tae Lim,
  • Brian R Ellis,
  • Steven J Skerlos

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/ab466e
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 11
p. 114014

Abstract

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Past studies on CO _2 utilization in the concrete industry have primarily focused on maximizing sequestered CO _2 , while focusing less on CO _2 avoidance possible by reducing binder use through the addition of CO _2 to concrete formulations. In this paper, we study the net CO _2 reduction and cost benefits achievable by reducing binder loading while adding CO _2 via three approaches: carbonation during curing, carbonation during mixing, or carbonation with recycled concrete aggregate. These techniques are evaluated for a cohort of concrete formulations representing the diverse mixture designs found in the US ready-mixed and precast industries. Each formulation is optimized for reduced binder loading where the use of CO _2 directly in the formulation recovers the lost compressive strength from reduced binder. We show that over an order of magnitude more CO _2 can be avoided when binder reduction is jointly implemented with CO _2 utilization compared to utilizing CO _2 alone. As a result, nearly 40% of the annual CO _2 emissions from the US concrete industry could, in principle, be eliminated without relying on novel supplemental materials, alternative binder, or carbon capture and sequestration. The recently amended 45Q tax credit will not incentivize this strategy, as it only considers carbon sequestration. However, we find that the saved material cost from reduced binder use on its own may provide a significant economic incentive to promote the joint strategy in practice. We conclude that the real value of CO _2 utilization in concrete hinges on exploiting CO _2 -induced property changes to yield additional emission reduction, not by maximizing absorbed CO _2 .

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