reviewJournal of the American Chemical SocietyMay 25, 2011Closed access

Anthropogenic Chemical Carbon Cycle for a Sustainable Future

University of Southern California

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Nature's photosynthesis uses the sun's energy with chlorophyll in plants as a catalyst to recycle carbon dioxide and water into new plant life. Only given sufficient geological time, millions of years, can new fossil fuels be formed naturally. The burning of our diminishing fossil fuel reserves is accompanied by large anthropogenic CO(2) release, which is outpacing nature's CO(2) recycling capability, causing significant environmental harm. To supplement the natural carbon cycle, we have proposed and developed a feasible anthropogenic chemical recycling of carbon dioxide. Carbon dioxide is captured by absorption technologies from any natural or industrial source, from human activities, or even from the air…

Citation impact

1,353
total citations
FWCI
95.47
Percentile
100%
References
107
Citations per year

Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Carbon-neutral fuel
  • Fossil fuel
  • Carbon dioxide
  • Renewable energy
  • Chemistry
  • Carbon cycle
  • Environmental science
  • Carbon neutrality
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Responsible consumption and production
No related works found for this paper.