Atmospheric Methane Research problem statements are shared to build community and knowledge around key challenges to accelerate progress.
Submit a problem statementView all problem statementsPaul Reginato, Chris Eiben, James Weltz, Paige Brocidiacono
This problem statement is also hosted on Homeworld's problem statement repository here.
This problem statement was created as part of a collaborative effort between Homeworld Collective and Spark Climate Solutions to identify and share priority problems at the intersection of biotech and atmospheric methane removal.
CH4 emissions account for ~30% of global warming (IEA, 2022), and natural sources may increase (Zhang, 2023). Technologies for oxidizing atmospheric CH4, area CH4 emissions, and unavoidable point sources could substantially mitigate climate change. While CH4 above ~44,000 ppm can be flared, lower concentrations require catalyzed oxidation. However, ~75% of CH4 pollution is atmospheric (2 ppm) or area emissions below 1000 ppm that are too dilute to be oxidized in reactors at scale using existing photocatalyst, thermocatalyst, or electrocatalyst technologies, for which the required energy input is infeasible (Abernathy, 2023). Adequate efficiency improvements to those technologies are not anticipated (Abernathy, 2023).
Additionally, incentives and utility would be strongest if even flareable point sources could be used as resources instead of oxidizing them to CO2. However, the high CapEx of CH4 transport or oxidation to methanol prevents the use of many small or distant CH4 point sources. A one-step CH4-to-methanol oxidation catalyst could enable a simpler process compared to the leading two-step, high-temperature high-pressure process, thereby improving economic viability of many methane sources and reducing overall methane emissions (Haynes, 2014).
Thus, an efficient methane oxidation catalyst could mitigate warming from methane via multiple avenues.
One-pot CH4 oxidation at ambient conditions occurs biologically (Tucci, 2024). While methanotroph-based technologies are being developed for dilute CH4 oxidation (La, 2018; Lidstrom, 2023) and methanol manufacturing (Bjorck, 2018), cell-free technologies may be advantageous. Cell-free systems could be more readily rationally engineered and adapted to designs optimized for mass transport. In methanol manufacturing, cell-free systems could avoid toxicity of feedstock impurities; growth inhibition by concentrated methanol; and costly methanol oxidation inhibitors (Bjorck, 2018). Cell-free systems may achieve lower CapEx by obviating an on-site bioreactor for methanotroph cultivation.
Methane monooxygenase enzymes (MMOs) are candidates for cell-free methane oxidation systems, but they require reductants, which are cost-prohibitive at scale, to activate O2 into a reactive oxidant (Tucci, 2024). A more economically feasible biocatalyst system would use a reactive oxidant generated electrochemically or by the CH4 oxidation process without additional inputs, or use electrons directly.
A cell-free system should be developed to oxidize methane without the input of additional small-molecule reductants. Possible solutions could involve direct electron transfer to MMO from an electrode, or catalysis of CH4 oxidation by a reactive oxidant generated electrochemically or by the CH4 oxidation process.
H2O2 is a reactive oxidant that might work for CH4 oxidation, if an efficient catalyst were developed. Methanol manufacturing would favor electrochemically-generated H2O2, while oxidation of dilute methane to CO2 could favor H2O2 generated through methane oxidation reactions. Candidate enzyme families for engineering catalysis of CH4 oxidation by H2O2 include soluble methane monooxygenases (sMMO), the hydroxylase component (MMOH) of which catalyzes CH4 oxidation by H2O2 at a low rate (Jiang, 1993); the unspecific peroxidases (Hofrichter, 2021) that oxidize short-chain alkanes but did not act on CH4 in the one study we are aware of (Sebastian, 2013); and the P450 peroxidases, which use H2O2 as an oxidant (Munn, 2018).
We note that techno-economic modeling (TEA) to estimate possible economic advantages of cell-free methane oxidation in various use cases will be an essential guide for engineering (Reginato, 2014), though proof-of-principle demonstration of reductant-free systems can begin now.
The significance could be made more clear by answering:
The goals could be made more granular by answering:
What total turnover number (Bommarius, 2023) would need to be achieved by cell-free enzymes to accomplish the necessary oxidation rate with economically-viable input costs?
Submitted by
Paul Reginato, Lisa Stein, Mary Lidstrom, Jeremy Semrau, Jessica Swanson, Wenyu Gu, Noah Helman, James Weltz, Mark Hansen, Paige Brocidiacono, Ariana Caiati, Erin Wilson
Submitted by
Paul Reginato, Lisa Stein, Mary Lidstrom, Jeremy Semrau, Jessica Swanson, Wenyu Gu, Noah Helman, James Weltz, Mark Hansen, Paige Brocidiacono, Ariana Caiati, Erin Wilson
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