[The company] says it has made Portland cement from silicate rocks like basalt—at the lab scale. Basalt contains a mix of minerals that include calcium, aluminum, iron, magnesium, sodium, silicon, and oxygen. (Note the absence of carbon from that list.) The basic idea is that you don’t need limestone to get calcium oxide.

The process of freeing these components from basalt looks more like a refining or recycling process than the toss-it-in-the-oven simplicity of the limestone process. Acid can be used to leach elements like calcium out, then a chemical or energetic process precipitates that calcium as calcium hydroxide. Toss that in a kiln with additives of your choice, and with less heating than you need for limestone, you’ve got Portland cement, with only water vapor released.

  • homes@piefed.world
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    1 month ago

    I remember reading about a process like this many years ago about an easy cement recipe that could help clean the air or something like that, but at the time, something didn’t work out for some reason…

    Edit: see my other comment. There is a reason I remembered this… Because environmentally friendly concrete is a 20 year-old idea… It’s a global industry now.