4.8 Article

Borate-Catalyzed Carbon Dioxide Hydration via the Carbonic Anhydrase Mechanism

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 45, Issue 11, Pages 4802-4807

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/es200590m

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Funding

  1. China Scholarship Council
  2. Cooperative Research Centre for Greenhouse Gas Technologies [CO2CRC]
  3. Australian Government
  4. Particulate Fluids Processing Centre (PFPC)

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The hydration of CO(2) plays a critical role in carbon capture and geoengineering technologies currently under development to mitigate anthropogenic global warming and in environmental processes such as ocean acidification. Here we reveal that borate catalyzes the conversion of CO(2) to HCO(3)(-) via the same fundamental mechanism as the enzyme carbonic anhydrase, which is responsible for CO(2) hydration in the human body. In this mechanism the tetrahydroxyborate ion, B(OH)(4)(-), is the active form of boron that undergoes direct reaction with CO(2). In addition to being able to accelerate CO(2) hydration in alkaline solvents used for carbon capture, we hypothesize that this mechanism controls CO(2) uptake by certain saline bodies of water, such as Mono Lake (California), where previously inexplicable influx rates of inorganic carbon have created unique chemistry. The new understanding of CO(2) hydration provided here should lead to improved models for the carbon cycle in highly saline bodies of water and to advances in carbon capture and geoengineering technology.

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