The Herald

Material will ‘capture’ industrial pollution

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A Computer-generated material has been developed for the first time to capture industrial pollution and tackle climate change in the “most economical way”.

Chemical engineers were inspired by tools in the pharmaceut­ical sector to simulate 325,000 new substances in a way which has never been done before to tackle carbon emissions.

The team used the digital materials in experiment­s which mimicked industrial operations and identified which performed best, rather than using trial and error.

Susana Garcia, associate director of Heriot-watt University’s Research Centre for Carbon Solutions (RCCS), said: “The exciting part of this work is that it completely changes the way we do research.

“We now have the tools to tailor-make a material that will separate carbon dioxide in the most economical way for a given source, like industrial emissions, and make it available for other purposes like carbon storage or as a resource for the chemical industry.

“These tools will become increasing­ly important as decarbonis­ing industry in the UK has become an important focus of the Government, and the progress we make can be exported internatio­nally. The impact of this work is transforma­tive.”

The simulation technique is used in the pharmaceut­ical sector for designing drugs. It inspired the researcher­s to computer generate substances and identify those with the best features.

These products – known as metal-organic framework materials – were then found to outperform those which are already available on the market.

Scientists believe their material could be on the market in as few as five years and help the UK achieve its net-zero emissions target by 2050.

Iron and steel process industries, cement plants, refineries and waste incinerati­on plants could all use the material to cut carbon pollution.

Dr Garcia said: “The anthropoge­nic emission of the greenhouse gas CO2 into the atmosphere is the single most important factor contributi­ng to climate change. Large CO2 emitters include power plants and industrial processes, so it’s critical that we develop new materials that can capture this greenhouse gas in an economical­ly viable way.”

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