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Direct In Situ Measurement of Alkalinity Export for Real-Time Enhanced Weathering MRV

DOI:
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Andrew Muth,
Jonte Boysen,
Pascal Michel
Abstract
Accurate quantification of alkalinity export from the near-field zone remains a key bottleneck for monitoring, reporting, and verification (MRV) of carbon dioxide removal (CDR) through Enhanced Weathering (EW). Here we validate the Everest Pulsar, a field-deployable alkalinity sensor that accumulates total alkalinity (TA) using a weak acid ion-exchange resin and transduces resin saturation into a digital, in situ measurement. In a 7-day continuous-flow soil column experiment (10 no-soil, 5 soil units), the sensor quantitatively retained incoming alkalinity, with capture efficiencies of 98.9% (SD=0.3%) without soil and > 97.7% (SD=0.2%) with soil. Combined capture-and-recovery efficiencies were 98.8% (SD=4.1%) and at least 93.9% (SD=1.3%) for no-soil and soil units respectively. Effluent alkalinity remained well below 2% across all loading states, and mass-balance residuals averaged 0.1% (SD=4.3%) without soil and 4.0% (SD=1.3%) with soil. The digital readout closely matched chemically recovered TA with an average deviation of -0.3% (SD=6.0%). These results provide the first quantitative validation of an in situ sensor capable of measuring cumulative alkalinity export and demonstrate a practical path toward accurate, cost-effective, real-time MRV of EW carbon removal.
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Experiments and field trials >>Geochemical CDR >>Supporting infrastructure >>
None
ERW, sensors, lab, mesocosm, enhanced weathering
The authors are employees of Everest Carbon, and hold equity or stock options in the company. Everest Carbon develops the Pulsar sensor technology described in this work.
November 26, 2025
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