Researchers Upcycle CO₂ into High-Value Building Materials—Turning Carbon Waste into Construction Assets

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A recent breakthrough published in ScienceDaily reveals that researchers have successfully converted waste carbon dioxide into stable, valuable building materials using novel metal oxalate precursors—marking a promising step toward sustainable construction. This process not only repurposes CO₂—a largely worthless byproduct—into useful cement ingredients, but also significantly reduces reliance on traditional, carbon-intensive cement production.

In parallel, scientists at the Indian Institute of Science (IISc) have pioneered methods that integrate CO₂ into construction by enriching soil and recycled demolition waste, effectively replacing natural sand in building materials. This dual strategy helps manage industrial flue gases while reducing environmental impact.

Additionally, research from the University of Michigan and collaborators at UC Davis and UCLA demonstrates that carbon dioxide can be transformed into metal oxalates, offering an eco-friendly cement precursor and cutting down harmful emissions in the production chain.

These innovations reflect a broader movement in academia and industry to embed carbon sequestration directly into building materials. Experts estimate that, if scaled up, such technologies could enable buildings to store billions of tonnes of CO₂, playing a pivotal role in climate change mitigation .

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