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06.19.09 News
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How Solid Is Concrete's Carbon Footprint?
A study appearing in the June 2009 Journal of Environmental Engineering suggests that the re-absorption of Carbon dioxide (CO2) may extend to products beyond calcite, increasing the total CO2 removed from the atmosphere and lowering concrete's overall carbon footprint. Researchers have known for decades that concrete absorbs CO2 to form calcite (calcium carbonate, CaCO3) during its lifetime, and even longer if the concrete is recycled into new construction--and because concrete is somewhat permeable, the effect extends beyond exposed surfaces. While such changes can be a structural concern for concrete containing rebar, where the change in acidity can damage the metal over many decades, the CaCO3 is actually denser than some of the materials it replaces and can add strength.
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Ancient Venus Rewrites History Books
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Obama's Nuclear-weapons-free Vision
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Science Gold Mine, Ethical Minefield
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Latest News
New Element Found to be a Superconductor
Researchers discover new data that will help improve scientists' theoretical understanding of superconductivity.
One Sponge-like Material, Three Different Applications
A new sponge-like material can remove mercury from polluted water, easily separate hydrogen from other gases and could be a more effective catalyst than the one currently used to pull sulfur out of crude oil.
Arctic River Deltas May Hold Clues to Future Global Climate
Arctic sediments could contain records of changes on land due to warming, including permafrost temperature and melting of upland glaciers.
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