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Waste coffee grounds can store methane

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Press Trust of India Seoul
Last Updated : Sep 03 2015 | 3:22 PM IST
Scientists have developed a simple 'soak and heating' process which treats waste coffee grounds to enable them to store the harmful greenhouse gas methane.
Methane capture and storage provides a double environmental return - it removes a harmful greenhouse gas from the atmosphere that can then be used as a fuel that is cleaner than other fossil fuels.
The process developed by the researchers, based at the Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology (UNIST), South Korea, involves soaking the waste coffee grounds in sodium hydroxide and heating to 700-900 degrees Celsius in a furnace.
This produced a stable carbon capture material in less than a day - a fraction of the time it takes to produce carbon capture materials.
"The big thing is we are decreasing the fabrication time and we are using cheap materials," said Christian Kemp, an author of the study now based at Pohang University of Science and Technology.
"The waste material is free compared to all the metals and expensive organic chemicals needed in other processes - in my opinion this is a far easier way to go," he said.

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The absorbency of coffee grounds may be the key to successful activation of the material for carbon capture.
"It seems when we add the sodium hydroxide to form the activated carbon it absorbs everything," said Kemp.
"We were able to take away one step in the normal activation process - the filtering and washing - because the coffee is such a brilliant absorbant," he said.
The work also demonstrates hydrogen storage at cryogenic temperatures, and the researchers are now keen to develop hydrogen storage in the activated coffee grounds at less extreme temperatures.
The results are published in the journal Nanotechnology.

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First Published: Sep 03 2015 | 3:22 PM IST

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