Carbon Dioxide Layer in the Atmosphere

Yusha

· Carbon Removal Conversion
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Definition
The carbon dioxide layer refers to the relatively high concentration of
CO2 in the troposphere of the earth's atmosphere. The range is
concentrated at an altitude of 7.6km-13km, and the CO2 concentration
is as high as 96%. Compared with the naturally formed ozone layer,
the CO2 layer is an industrial artifact.

 

FORM
The carbon dioxide emissions from human production activities are 36.8
gigatons per year. With the continuous carbon emissions over the
years and the cumulative amount so far from the industrial revolution
(CO2 life cycle 100-1000 years), the proportion of atmospheric CO2e
equivalent in the troposphere has far exceeded human comfort. The
concentration is 35%-45%.

 

Influence
When the atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration exceeds 45%, a carbon
dioxide layer will form at an altitude of 7.6km-13km, like a glass
cover covering the entire earth. It not only aggravates the extreme
climate change caused by the greenhouse effect, blocks 86% of the
solar spectrum integrity and causes Atmospheric purity dropped by
86%, water purity dropped by 86%, and plant and crop growth rates
dropped by 76%.

 

Solution
Atpresent, atmospheric capture technology is difficult to reach
altitudes above the atmospheric boundary layer, and its processing
efficiency, removal scale and cost cannot meet the megaton-level
commercial transfer standards. Unless effective and low-cost carbon
removal technology emerges, the 2050 global climate can be realized
as soon as possible. Net zero emissions.

 

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