Table_1_The efficacy of enhancing carbonate weathering for carbon dioxide sequestration.XLSX

Enhanced weathering is a geoengineering strategy aiming to increase continental weathering rates, thereby increasing the delivery of atmospheric carbon (as HCO3-) to the oceans. Most enhanced weathering studies focus on the capacity of silicate rocks (e.g., basalt) and minerals (e.g., olivine, Mg 2...

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Main Authors: William J. Knapp, Edward T. Tipper
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3389/fclim.2022.928215.s001
https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Table_1_The_efficacy_of_enhancing_carbonate_weathering_for_carbon_dioxide_sequestration_XLSX/20470224
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spelling ftfrontimediafig:oai:figshare.com:article/20470224 2024-09-15T18:01:42+00:00 Table_1_The efficacy of enhancing carbonate weathering for carbon dioxide sequestration.XLSX William J. Knapp Edward T. Tipper 2022-08-11T04:29:39Z https://doi.org/10.3389/fclim.2022.928215.s001 https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Table_1_The_efficacy_of_enhancing_carbonate_weathering_for_carbon_dioxide_sequestration_XLSX/20470224 unknown doi:10.3389/fclim.2022.928215.s001 https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Table_1_The_efficacy_of_enhancing_carbonate_weathering_for_carbon_dioxide_sequestration_XLSX/20470224 CC BY 4.0 Climate Science Climate Change Processes Climatology (excl. Climate Change Processes) Carbon Sequestration Science carbonate weathering soil pCO2 carbon sequestration rivers enhanced weathering in soils calcite dissolution capacity Dataset 2022 ftfrontimediafig https://doi.org/10.3389/fclim.2022.928215.s001 2024-08-19T06:19:48Z Enhanced weathering is a geoengineering strategy aiming to increase continental weathering rates, thereby increasing the delivery of atmospheric carbon (as HCO3-) to the oceans. Most enhanced weathering studies focus on the capacity of silicate rocks (e.g., basalt) and minerals (e.g., olivine, Mg 2 SiO 4 , or wollastonite CaSiO 3 ) to remove atmospheric CO 2 . However, carbonate minerals (e.g., calcite, CaCO 3 ) could provide an additional, rapid way to increase HCO3- export to the oceans. Recent studies suggest that 0.84 Gt C yr −1 could be removed from the atmosphere through the enhanced dissolution of calcite in soils, provided carbonic acid is the main dissolution agent. What is not clear is whether atmospheric CO 2 dissolved in soils can be transported by rivers, which typically have lower [pCO 2 ], to the oceans. This difference in calcite solubility between soils (where weathering occurs) and rivers (where HCO3- is transported) may lead to large amounts of secondary carbonate formation during transport, releasing the CO 2 consumed through dissolution. Here, we present a modeling study comparing the estimated soil dissolution capacity (SDC) in 149 of Earth's largest river basins, to the potential transport capacity of carbon (PTCC) in corresponding rivers. We find the SDC can only be exported to the oceans, without secondary carbonate precipitation, if rivers are in disequilibrium with respect to calcite (i.e., SIc = 1). In this instance, 0.92 Gt C yr −1 may be sequestered above background weathering rates, which is ~20% of annual increases in atmospheric carbon. If rivers are at equilibrium with calcite (i.e., SIc = 0), approximately two-thirds of the carbon dissolved in soil waters are lost due to calcite precipitation in rivers, and just 0.26 Gt of additional atmospheric C yr −1 can be transported to the oceans. Overall, the efficacy of enhanced carbonate weathering is a function of the capacity rivers have for transporting the products from carbonate weathering to the oceans, rather than the ... Dataset Carbonic acid Frontiers: Figshare
institution Open Polar
collection Frontiers: Figshare
op_collection_id ftfrontimediafig
language unknown
topic Climate Science
Climate Change Processes
Climatology (excl. Climate Change Processes)
Carbon Sequestration Science
carbonate weathering
soil pCO2
carbon sequestration
rivers
enhanced weathering in soils
calcite dissolution capacity
spellingShingle Climate Science
Climate Change Processes
Climatology (excl. Climate Change Processes)
Carbon Sequestration Science
carbonate weathering
soil pCO2
carbon sequestration
rivers
enhanced weathering in soils
calcite dissolution capacity
William J. Knapp
Edward T. Tipper
Table_1_The efficacy of enhancing carbonate weathering for carbon dioxide sequestration.XLSX
topic_facet Climate Science
Climate Change Processes
Climatology (excl. Climate Change Processes)
Carbon Sequestration Science
carbonate weathering
soil pCO2
carbon sequestration
rivers
enhanced weathering in soils
calcite dissolution capacity
description Enhanced weathering is a geoengineering strategy aiming to increase continental weathering rates, thereby increasing the delivery of atmospheric carbon (as HCO3-) to the oceans. Most enhanced weathering studies focus on the capacity of silicate rocks (e.g., basalt) and minerals (e.g., olivine, Mg 2 SiO 4 , or wollastonite CaSiO 3 ) to remove atmospheric CO 2 . However, carbonate minerals (e.g., calcite, CaCO 3 ) could provide an additional, rapid way to increase HCO3- export to the oceans. Recent studies suggest that 0.84 Gt C yr −1 could be removed from the atmosphere through the enhanced dissolution of calcite in soils, provided carbonic acid is the main dissolution agent. What is not clear is whether atmospheric CO 2 dissolved in soils can be transported by rivers, which typically have lower [pCO 2 ], to the oceans. This difference in calcite solubility between soils (where weathering occurs) and rivers (where HCO3- is transported) may lead to large amounts of secondary carbonate formation during transport, releasing the CO 2 consumed through dissolution. Here, we present a modeling study comparing the estimated soil dissolution capacity (SDC) in 149 of Earth's largest river basins, to the potential transport capacity of carbon (PTCC) in corresponding rivers. We find the SDC can only be exported to the oceans, without secondary carbonate precipitation, if rivers are in disequilibrium with respect to calcite (i.e., SIc = 1). In this instance, 0.92 Gt C yr −1 may be sequestered above background weathering rates, which is ~20% of annual increases in atmospheric carbon. If rivers are at equilibrium with calcite (i.e., SIc = 0), approximately two-thirds of the carbon dissolved in soil waters are lost due to calcite precipitation in rivers, and just 0.26 Gt of additional atmospheric C yr −1 can be transported to the oceans. Overall, the efficacy of enhanced carbonate weathering is a function of the capacity rivers have for transporting the products from carbonate weathering to the oceans, rather than the ...
format Dataset
author William J. Knapp
Edward T. Tipper
author_facet William J. Knapp
Edward T. Tipper
author_sort William J. Knapp
title Table_1_The efficacy of enhancing carbonate weathering for carbon dioxide sequestration.XLSX
title_short Table_1_The efficacy of enhancing carbonate weathering for carbon dioxide sequestration.XLSX
title_full Table_1_The efficacy of enhancing carbonate weathering for carbon dioxide sequestration.XLSX
title_fullStr Table_1_The efficacy of enhancing carbonate weathering for carbon dioxide sequestration.XLSX
title_full_unstemmed Table_1_The efficacy of enhancing carbonate weathering for carbon dioxide sequestration.XLSX
title_sort table_1_the efficacy of enhancing carbonate weathering for carbon dioxide sequestration.xlsx
publishDate 2022
url https://doi.org/10.3389/fclim.2022.928215.s001
https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Table_1_The_efficacy_of_enhancing_carbonate_weathering_for_carbon_dioxide_sequestration_XLSX/20470224
genre Carbonic acid
genre_facet Carbonic acid
op_relation doi:10.3389/fclim.2022.928215.s001
https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/Table_1_The_efficacy_of_enhancing_carbonate_weathering_for_carbon_dioxide_sequestration_XLSX/20470224
op_rights CC BY 4.0
op_doi https://doi.org/10.3389/fclim.2022.928215.s001
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