Science Daily
UBE, Japan, June 26 (UPI) -- Japanese scientists have created a process that breaks down certain plastics, allowing the chemicals to be reused to make new higher-quality plastic.The Yamaguchi University researchers said their approach is similar to the process that fostered recycling of beverage cans, scrap steel and glass containers -- all of which are melted to produce aluminum, glass and steel.
However, no process has emerged to breakdown the long chains of molecules that make up the millions of pounds of polymer materials that are trashed each year. Instead, recycling of certain plastics involves melting and reforming into a plastic that is less pure than the original.
bismillahir rahmaanir rahiim, dengan segala rendah-eling-bathin pisungsung tersanjung berpijak tegar-tepekur pancaran rahayu keluarga. cipta-satria-kriya-wirya lir nirmala anugerah bawa teksana persembahan sekuntum bunga untuk untai puspa bagi masyarakat perminyakan indonesia dan sektor hilirnya. banda aceh, palembang, jakarta, bogor, cepu, yogyakarta, surabaya; mandala lumampah tengahing warsa 2004 niscaya berbuat, tak sekedar keluh-kritik, pantang ejawantah dengki jealousy. [cepu, juni 2004]
27 June 2007
Deep underground CO2 storage considered
Science Daily
WASHINGTON, June 26 (UPI) -- U.S. government scientists have determined deep coal seams that aren't commercially viable for coal production might be used for carbon dioxide storage.
Such permanent underground CO2 storage would avoid atmospheric release, thereby combating climate change, as well as displacing additional useful methane from the coal beds, scientists said.
Researchers at the U.S. Department of Energy's National Energy Technology Laboratory collected 2,000 coal samples from 250 unmineable coal beds across 17 states. The scientists theorize there is storage capacity for nearly 3 trillion tons of CO2 in such deep coal seams worldwide.
The research team also investigated possible side-effects of sequestering CO2 in coal mines and found some toxic metals originally trapped in the coal would be released by the process.
"Changes in water chemistry and the potential for mobilizing toxic trace elements from coal beds are potentially important factors to be considered when evaluating deep, unmineable coal seams for CO2 sequestration," they said, although they noted such effects might be harmless given the depth of such coal seams.
The research appears in two studies published in the International Journal of Environment and Pollution.
Copyright 2007 by United Press International. All Rights Reserved.
WASHINGTON, June 26 (UPI) -- U.S. government scientists have determined deep coal seams that aren't commercially viable for coal production might be used for carbon dioxide storage.
Such permanent underground CO2 storage would avoid atmospheric release, thereby combating climate change, as well as displacing additional useful methane from the coal beds, scientists said.
Researchers at the U.S. Department of Energy's National Energy Technology Laboratory collected 2,000 coal samples from 250 unmineable coal beds across 17 states. The scientists theorize there is storage capacity for nearly 3 trillion tons of CO2 in such deep coal seams worldwide.
The research team also investigated possible side-effects of sequestering CO2 in coal mines and found some toxic metals originally trapped in the coal would be released by the process.
"Changes in water chemistry and the potential for mobilizing toxic trace elements from coal beds are potentially important factors to be considered when evaluating deep, unmineable coal seams for CO2 sequestration," they said, although they noted such effects might be harmless given the depth of such coal seams.
The research appears in two studies published in the International Journal of Environment and Pollution.
Copyright 2007 by United Press International. All Rights Reserved.
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