This document summarizes a technical seminar presentation on oxygen carriers used in chemical looping combustion. Chemical looping combustion is a process for carbon dioxide capture that uses metal oxides as oxygen carriers in two interconnected fluidized bed reactors - an air reactor and a fuel reactor. In the fuel reactor, gaseous fuel reacts with the metal oxide to produce carbon dioxide, water and heat. The reduced metal oxide is then reoxidized in the air reactor. Nickel, copper, iron and manganese are common oxygen carriers that must be stable, fluidizable, resistant to agglomeration and mechanically durable. The selection of oxygen carrier is a key aspect, with nickel oxide and iron oxide being favorable but having different properties and reactivities