Particle.news
Download on the App Store

Electrified Cement and Basalt Feedstocks Show Big Emissions Cuts in New Studies

Early lab results point to large cuts with pilot plants and standards as the next hurdles.

Overview

  • Researchers report an electrochemical cement method that lowers energy use by about 70% and cuts carbon emissions by 98% compared with today’s process.
  • The UBC team runs the key reaction at roughly 60°C, then forms belite in a kiln at about 650°C, replacing most high‑heat steps with electricity.
  • Using recycled waste cement as the feedstock drops emissions to about 20 kilograms of CO2 per ton, and the reaction also makes hydrogen that could fire the kiln.
  • UBC has filed an international patent on the process and two authors co‑founded a company to pursue commercialization, though results remain at the laboratory stage.
  • A separate UC Santa Barbara and Brimstone study finds calcium from basalt could make standard Portland cement with less than 60% of limestone’s energy and over 80% lower CO2, with abundant rock resources identified.