1 research outputs found
Microbial Carbonation of Monocalcium Silicate
Biocement formed
through microbially induced calcium carbonate
precipitation (MICP) is an emerging biotechnology focused on reducing
the environmental impact of concrete production. In this system, CO2 species are provided via ureolysis by Sporosarcina
pasteurii (S. pasteurii) to carbonate monocalcium silicate for MICP. This is one of the
first studies of its kind that uses a solid-state calcium source,
while prior work has used highly soluble forms. Our study focuses
on microbial physiological, chemical thermodynamic, and kinetic studies
of MICP. Monocalcium silicate incongruently dissolves to form soluble
calcium, which must be coupled with CO2 release to form
calcium carbonate. Chemical kinetic modeling shows that calcium solubility
is the rate-limiting step, but the addition of organic acids significantly
increases the solubility, enabling extensive carbonation to proceed
up to 37 mol %. The microbial urease activity by S.
pasteurii is active up to pH 11, 70 °C, and 1
mol L–1 CaCl2, producing calcite as a
means of solidification. Cell-free extracts are also effective albeit
less robust at extreme pH, producing calcite with different physical
properties. Together, these data help determine the chemical, biological,
and thermodynamic parameters critical for scaling microbial carbonation
of monocalcium silicate to high-density cement and concrete
