eCoral: How Electrolysis Could Restore Seawater Conditions Ideal for Coral Reefs

Date Published
12/12/2024
Publication Type
Journal Article
Authors
DOI
10.1021/acs.jpclett.4c02715
Abstract

Coral reefs suffer from climate change, including long-term ocean acidification (OA) and warming and short-term bleaching, tropical storms, and pollution events, all of which are increasing in frequency and severity. It is urgent yet unclear how to intervene to save coral reefs. Reversal of the ocean pH to preindustrial levels could restore coral reefs to their preindustrial growth rates; however, strategies to reverse OA on environmentally relevant scales have not been established. Anecdotally, electrolysis seems to help coral reefs recover from acidification and short-term events, but few uncontrolled studies support such claims. Here, using two independent continuum simulation approaches (COMSOL and CrunchFlow), we show the effect of electrolysis on seawater chemistry relevant to coral reef survival and growth. We conclude that near the negative electrodes, the cathodes, seawater pH, supersaturation, and carbonate concentration all increase significantly. Electrolysis of seawater, therefore, can be used to restore preindustrial ocean conditions locally to save coral reefs, an approach termed eCoral here. We anticipate these simulation results to be the starting point for controlled experiments to test whether seawater electrolysis promotes coral reef growth and restoration, as these simulations predict.

Journal
The Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters
Volume
15
Year of Publication
2024
Issue
49
Pagination
12206-12211
Publisher
American Chemical Society (ACS)
ISSN Number
1948-7185, 1948-7185
URL
Organizations
Research Areas
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