1: Introduction
Some people think that carbon and sustainable development are not compatible. This textbook shows that carbon dioxide (CO2) from the air and bio-carbon from biomass are our best allies in the energy transition, towards greater sustainability. We pose the problem of the decarbonation (or decarbonization) of our economy by looking at ways to reduce our dependence on fossil carbon (coal, petroleum, natural gas, bitumen, carbonaceous shales, lignite, peat). The urgent goal is to curb the exponential increase in the concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere and hydrosphere (Figures 1.1 and 1.2) that is directly related to our consumption of fossil carbon for our energy and materials The goal of the Paris agreement (United Nations COP 21, Dec. 12, 2015) of limiting the temperature increase to 1.5 degrees (compared to the pre-industrial era, before 1800) is becoming increasingly unattainable (Intergovermental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), report of Aug. 6, 2021). On Aug. 9, 2021 Boris Johnson, prime minister of the United Kingdom, declared that coal needs to be consigned to history to limit global warming. CO2 has an important social cost…
- “absolute mass”
- alkane
- alkene
- alkyne
- ammonia
- anode ray
- atom
- atomic mass
- atomic nucleus
- atomic number
- atomic theory
- Avogadro’s law
- beginning of life on Earth
- benzene
- bio-carbon
- biochar (vegetable coal)
- biomass
- bio-polymers
- biosphere
- calcium carbonate
- calcium oxide
- carbenium ion
- carbohydrate
- carbon cycle
- carbon-14 dating
- carbon dioxide
- carbonium ion
- carbon sink
- cathode ray
- chemical bond
- chemical equation
- chemical reaction
- chlorophyll
- combustion
- Crookes tube
- decarbonation
- decarburation
- circular economy
- electron
- elements
- evaporation
- fossil carbon
- fuel oil
- gaseous state
- gasoline
- greenhouse gas
- heat
- hydrocarbon
- hydrogen
- inorganic compound
- ionization
- isotope
- kerosene
- law of perfect gases
- liquid state
- light
- life on Earth
- mass spectrograph
- methane
- molar mass
- molar volume
- molecular mass
- molecule
- nitrogen
- nitrous oxide (N2O: “laughing gas”)
- nuclear reaction
- organic compound
- oxygen
- perfect gas
- periodic table (Mendeleev)
- phase transition
- photosynthesis
- plasma
- prebiotic soup
- pure substance
- quartz
- solid state
- stoichiometry
- sublimation
- sulfur
- super-critical fluid
- Thomson tube
- toluene
- van der Waals force
- water
- xylene