In Episode 23 of the Catching Carbon Podcast, Jeff & Luke welcome some special guests from Hycamite TCD Technologies, a pioneering company at the forefront of the low-carbon energy revolution. Carolina M. Ahlstrand, Matti Malkamäki, and Niina Grönqvist discuss Hycamite’s groundbreaking work in producing low carbon hydrogen and other sustainable carbon products.
But what sets them apart is their innovative approach to turning carbon emissions into usable resources. Hycamite's process can be carbon negative under certain circumstances. How, you ask? Well, our guests will reveal that this transformational alchemy becomes a reality when they source methane from biogas or synthetic methane created by capturing atmospheric carbon. Join our hosts as they dive deep into a conversation with Hycamite's experts to explore the world of carbon transformation.
Hycamite's unique process involves the decomposition of methane into its elemental components - hydrogen and carbon. The magic lies in the fact that both of these components are produced in forms readily usable by various industries.
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Hey everybody, welcome back to the podcast. CO2 is a component of that hydrogen creation or so we thought. Really excited to have high comite here today with these catalysts and a little bit of heat we can split the methane molecule into two. So we will have hydrogen molecules and we will have solid carbon and this way the capture rate for the for the carbon is actually 100% and the solid carbon then can be used in in other applications. You just split the atom so there is no burning. Off you're not creating CO2 at all you just have that carbon molecule from the CH4 but we don't we don't actually split the atoms. I mean this is not nuclear power but but you work on that but we really it seems that the United States is going to be one of the first early adopters of hydrogen at scale. The Department of Energy had meetings with private industry DOE and seeing you know what does the DOE need to do to facilitate off takers of hydrogen because we know that hydrogen production. Is there, But where are the off takers, right, the availability, the efficiency, the scalability, the affordability that Matthew mentioned is something that everybody's welcoming in the United States. From a business development perspective, are you more focused on pushing and selling the carbon and the hydrogen double the byproduct of that? So there's obviously an outlet for hydrogen, but if you focus in on the carbon first, the hydrogen is just an offset there from chemical point of view, hydrazine. It's very simple molecule. We are now building the first industrial scale demonstration unit in in Finland. When we scale up it's gonna be big. First off we we lack hydrogen, second off we lack cost effective hydrogen. Then then you have the CO2 problem that comes along with the hydrogen.
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