Biorock, also known as Seacrete, is a substance formed by electro-accumulation of minerals dissolved in seawater. The building process, popularly called accretion, is not to be confused with Biorock sewage treatment. The biorock building process grows cement-like engineering structures and marine ecosystems, often for mariculture of corals, oysters, clams, lobsters and fish in salt water. It works by passing a small electrical current through electrodes in the water. The structure grows more or less without limit as long as current flows.
Biorock accelerates growth on coral reefs by as much as fivefold and increases coral survival. Biorock can enable coral growth and regrowth even in the presence of environmental stress such as thermal pollution, i.e. increasing water temperatures. When mixed with construction aggregates, it can build components on the sea floor or on land. Biorock represents the only known method that can sustain and grow natural coral species using only basic conducting elements, typically of a common metal such as steel.
Biorock samples range in compressive strength from 3720 to 5350 lbf/in² (26 to 37 MPa) – for comparison, the concrete typically used in sidewalks has a strength of about 3500 lbf/in² (24 MPa). One of the main component of biorock is magnesium hydroxide, another is calcium carbonate. This composition is chiefly the result of the ionic composition of seawater.[1] Over three decades of practical experience with biorock have shown that one kilowatt hour of electricity will result in the accretion of about 0.4 to 1.5 kg (0.9 to 3.3 lb) of biorock, depending on various parameters such as depth, electrical current, salinity and water temperature.[2] [3]
Biorock is cost-effective, requiring only metal bars or equivalent and a small amount of electricity. While electricity provided from fossil fuels generates CO2, biorock projects have often used solar power, wind power, tidal power, and wave power, which don't produce CO2. The resulting material is cheaper than concrete blocks in many places, depending on local electricity and cement transport costs.[4]
Contents |
In an attempt to slow the damage done to the world’s coral, artificial reefs have been built since the 1950s out of materials ranging from concrete blocks to discarded tires. However, most of these plans have failed to provide a new coral habitat, most notoriously the attempt using tires off the shore of Fort Lauderdale has become a complete environmental disaster. There have been some successes with artificial reefs, but most remain relatively barren compared with natural reefs. The one notable exception is the work of architect/marine scientist Prof. Wolf Hilbertz(*1938 †2007) and marine biologist Dr. Thomas J. Goreau(*1950).
Biorock technology arose from experiments in the 1970s when Hilbertz was studying how seashells and reefs grow, by passing electrical currents through salt water. In 1974, he found that as the salt water electrolyzes, calcium carbonate (aragonite) slowly forms around the cathode, eventually coating the electrode with a material as strong as concrete. Later experiments showed that the coatings can thicken at the rate of 5 cm per year. As long as current flows, the structure continues to get larger and stronger. It can also heal itself if damaged, making it particularly useful as a replacement for concrete in hard-to-access locations.
Hilbertz originally called his invention, on which he had several patents, underwater mineral accretion or accretion for short. The term biorock wasn't coined until later. Hilbertz’s original plan was to use this technology to grow low-cost structures in the ocean for developing countries. He also envisioned accreting large aquadynamic OTEC ocean thermal energy conversion plants, both for generating power and for producing hydrogen, ammonia, and magnesium hydroxide.[5] This appeared to result in a building process largely independent of land-based resources.
His focus shifted to coral reefs after meeting Dr. Thomas Goreau in the 1980s. They formed a long-standing partnership, with Goreau continuing work on biorock technologies and coral reef restoration after Hilbertz' death in 2007. Because the biorock process uses such simple materials, electrode forms can be constructed in a variety of shapes to mimic natural reefs. Since the calcium carbonate coating that forms is so similar to natural reef substrate, corals take to biorock reefs very readily. Countless projects over the years have demonstrated that coral thrive on the electrified reef. One prominent example was in the Maldives during the 1998 warming, during which fewer than 5% of the natural reef corals survived. On biorock reefs in the area, 80% of corals not only survived, they flourished.[6]
As "Seacrete" the process was substantially publicised in a book of futurology, The Millennial Project. The author, Marshall Savage, reiterated Hilbertz' earlier proposal that the conductive metal magnesium be extracted from ocean water, and that the process use electricity from ocean thermal energy conversion.
Applying a low voltage electrical current (completely safe for swimmers and marine life) to a submerged conductive structure causes dissolved minerals in seawater to precipitate and adhere to that structure. The result is a composite of brucite and limestone with mechanical strength similar to concrete. Derived from seawater, this material is similar to the composition of natural coral reefs and tropical sand beaches.
Biorock structures can be built in any size or shape depending only on the physical makeup of the sea bottom, wave, current energies and construction materials. They are well suited for remote, third world sites where exotic building materials, construction equipment and highly skilled labor are non-existent.
To build a biorock reef, a welded, electrically conductive frame, often made from construction grade rebar or wire mesh, is submerged and anchored to the sea bottom. A low voltage direct current is applied using an anode. This initiates an electrolytic reaction causing mineral crystals naturally found in seawater, mainly calcium carbonate and magnesium hydroxide, to grow on the structure.
Within days, the structure takes on a whitish hue as it becomes encrusted with precipitated minerals adding rigidity and strength. Electrical fields, plus the shade and protection offered by the metal/limestone frame, attract a wide range of colonizing marine life including fish, crabs, clams, octopus, lobster, and sea urchins.
Once the reef structure is in place and minerals begin to coat the surface, the next phase of reef construction begins. Divers transplant coral fragments from other reefs, attaching them to the ark’s frame. Immediately, these coral pieces begin to bond to the accreted mineral substrate and start to grow—typically three to five times faster than normal. Soon the reef takes on the appearance and utility of a natural reef ecosystem rather than a man-made one.
Electrolysis of biorock reefs enhances coral growth, reproduction and ability to resist environmental stress. Coral species typically found on healthy reefs gain a major advantage over the weedy organisms that often overgrow them on reefs stressed by eutrophication. In tests where the electrical current is interrupted, mineral accretion stops and weeds begin to cover the corals. But, if the current is maintained, coral reef habitats can often be restored even in areas where water quality would prevent their recovery by any other method.
Biorock reefs grow rapidly and strengthen as they age. They thus have great potential for many applications, such as making breakwaters. If waves or colliding ships cause damage, renewed accretion makes them, to an extent, self-repairing. Unlike some other types of artificial reefs made from cars or tires, biorock reefs don't leach harmful pollutants into the sea.
As of 2011, biorock coral reef projects exist in over 20 countries in the Caribbean, Indian Ocean, Pacific, and Southeast Asia. One project is located on one of the most remote and unexplored reef areas of the world, the Saya de Malha Bank in the Indian Ocean.[7] Other biorock projects are located in Indonesia, Maldives, Mexico, Panama, Papua New Guinea, Seychelles, and Thailand. The most biorock projects are currently located in Indonesia, with sites in over half a dozen islands, including the two largest reef restoration projects in the world: Pemuteran with the Karang Lestari and the Gili islands with the Gili Eco Trust.[8] Non-coral biorock projects have been conducted in other places such as Barataria Bay, Galveston, seagrasses in the Mediterranean, oyster reefs and salt marshes in New York City, in Port Aransas, and in St. Croix.