Zachary Gutierrez+FollowTurning CO2 Into Gold (Well, Almost)Who knew acid bubbles could be the secret to fighting climate change? Researchers just found a way to turn carbon dioxide (yep, the bad stuff) into useful materials like fuels and chemicals—without the usual clogs that ruin the process. Their new trick? Swapping water for acid-humidified CO2, which kept things running for thousands of hours. It’s a major win for clean tech and could help us recycle all that extra CO2 floating around. Science is wild! #Science #ClimateInnovation #ScienceNews20Share
Zachary Gutierrez+FollowHumidity Hack Could Clean Our AirScientists just found a wild new way to fight climate change—using humidity! Northwestern University researchers discovered that common, cheap materials (even stuff made from waste) can trap and release carbon pollution just by playing with the air’s moisture. It’s like letting nature do the heavy lifting, and it could make carbon capture way more affordable and widespread. Bonus: it helps cut down on trash, too. Imagine cleaning the air and reducing waste at the same time! This could be a total game-changer for fighting pollution. #ClimateInnovation #Sustainability #ScienceWin #CarbonCapture #EcoFriendly #Science21Share
Patrick Simmons+FollowConcrete from Seawater? This Is WildScientists just figured out how to turn minerals from seawater into a carbon-negative building material for concrete! Not only does this process suck more CO2 out of the air than it emits, but it could also replace the need for sand and gravel mining (which is a huge environmental headache). Imagine future buildings literally helping fight climate change—plus, no more wrecking riverbeds for sand. Would you live in a house made from ocean minerals? #ClimateInnovation #SustainableBuilding #ScienceNews #GreenTech #Science10Share