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Pressure-Based CO₂ Capture System Advances Industrial Decarbonisation

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Representational image. Credit: Canva

A new carbon capture approach developed at Texas A&M University is claiming to significantly reduce the cost of industrial decarbonisation by using a simple physical principle: dissolving carbon dioxide in water under pressure.

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The process, known as Pressure Induced Carbon Capture (PICC), relies on water and controlled pressure changes to absorb and release CO₂ from industrial exhaust streams. Unlike conventional systems that use chemical solvents such as amines, PICC operates through physical absorption — similar to how carbon dioxide dissolves in a sealed soda bottle and escapes when opened.

A Simpler Alternative to Chemical Capture

Traditional amine-based carbon capture technologies dominate the market but face cost and efficiency challenges. They typically capture around 90% of carbon dioxide emissions and cost between $50 and $100 per metric ton of CO₂ removed. In addition, amines degrade over time and require energy-intensive regeneration.

According to its developers, PICC can capture and compress up to 99% of carbon dioxide emissions for approximately $26 per metric ton. By introducing a small amount of lime to the water, the system reportedly achieves near-100% capture at a cost below $28 per ton — including carbon dioxide originating from combustion air.

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The process involves cooling and compressing flue gas from power plants or industrial facilities before introducing it into an absorption column where it contacts cold water. CO₂ dissolves under high pressure, while cleaner gas exits the system. The CO₂-rich water is then depressurised in stages, allowing the gas to bubble out for compression and storage.

Implications for Industrial Decarbonisation

If scalable, the technology could offer a lower-cost pathway for reducing emissions in hard-to-abate sectors such as cement, steel, hydrogen production and thermal power generation. It may also complement biomass combustion systems to enable negative emissions.

For the broader clean energy ecosystem, lower-cost carbon capture solutions could influence carbon credit markets, industrial transition strategies and policy frameworks targeting net-zero commitments.

While commercial deployment and large-scale validation remain key next steps, the claimed cost reduction positions pressure-based carbon capture as a potential disruptor in the evolving carbon management landscape.


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