Sedimentary Catalysis of Radiolytic Hydrogen Production

Hydrogen (H2) and oxidants (O2 and H2O2) are naturally produced by radiolysis of water in any environment where water is bombarded by α, β, and γ radiation generated during radioactive decay. The production of radiolytic H2 in aqueous solutions and in some monomineral-water mixtures has been extensi...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Sauvage, Justine Flore
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: DigitalCommons@URI 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.uri.edu/dissertations/AAI10791561
id ftunivrhodeislan:oai:digitalcommons.uri.edu:dissertations-4083
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection University of Rhode Island: DigitalCommons@URI
op_collection_id ftunivrhodeislan
language English
topic Geology|Microbiology|Biogeochemistry
spellingShingle Geology|Microbiology|Biogeochemistry
Sauvage, Justine Flore
Sedimentary Catalysis of Radiolytic Hydrogen Production
topic_facet Geology|Microbiology|Biogeochemistry
description Hydrogen (H2) and oxidants (O2 and H2O2) are naturally produced by radiolysis of water in any environment where water is bombarded by α, β, and γ radiation generated during radioactive decay. The production of radiolytic H2 in aqueous solutions and in some monomineral-water mixtures has been extensively studied, yet yields of radiolytic products in natural materials remain largely unexplored. Quantification of radiolytic production in common geological materials is critical to assess the importance of water radiolysis as source of microbial fuel and oxidants in water-containing subsurface environments. Knowledge of radiolytic production is also fundamental throughout the nuclear industry as the maintenance and development of nuclear reactors, long-term disposal of radioactive waste and the management of mixed waste storage tanks is intricately associated with radiolysis products. We experimentally quantified H2 yields for α- and γ-irradiation of pure water, seawater, and slurries of marine sediment, montmorillonite, and two natural zeolites (mordenite and clinoptilolite) widely used throughout the nuclear industry. The sediment samples include the dominant types found in the global ocean (abyssal clay, nannofossil-bearing clay [marl], clay-bearing diatom ooze, and nannofossil ooze). These experiments demonstrate that all common types of marine sediment and zeolites catalyze radiolytic H2 production. Hydrogen yields [G(H2)] differ from one geological material to another and range between 3.43 and 37.54 molecules H2 100eV-1 and 0.27 and 1.96 molecules H2 100eV -1 for α-particles and γ-rays induced water radiolysis, respectively. Abyssal clays, earth’s most widespread marine sediment type, exhibit the highest yield amplification when exposed to α-particles with an average factor increase of 18 relative to pure water. Siliceous ooze and abyssal clay exhibit the highest H2 yields when exposed to γ-rays, increasing production by factors of up to 8 and 4, respectively. Calcareous ooze (factor 5 amplification) and lithogeneous sediment (17% amplification) exhibit the smallest yield amplification under α-particle and γ-rays irradiation, respectively. Zeolite mineral slurries increase G(H2) for α- and γ-irradiation by factors of 13 and 4, respectively (similar to abyssal clay). Our results show that substrate chemistry and specific surface area are the main factors that control radiolytic H2 production. The mineral-catalysis of radiolytic H2 production has significant implications for: (i) sustenance of Earth’s subsurface microbial ecosystems (ii) habitability of other planetary bodies, and (iii) nuclear industrial activities. In electron equivalents per unit area, radiolytic H2 production in marine sediment locally produces up to 1% as much electron donor (food) as photosynthetic carbon fixation in the ocean. Although small relative to global photosynthetic biomass production, sediment-catalyzed production of radiolytic products is significant in the subseafloor. Our analysis of 9 sites in the North Atlantic, North and South Pacific suggests that H 2 is the primary microbial fuel in oxic organic-poor sediment older than a few million years. At these sites, calculated radiolytic H2 consumption rates are more than an order of magnitude higher than organic-matter oxidation rates. Radiolytic H2 is also a significant microbial electron donor in anoxic marine sediment older than a few million years. Oxidants from water radiolysis (O2 and H2O2) are significant electron acceptors in both oxic and anoxic sediment throughout the ocean. Discovery and quantification of the catalytic effect of clays and zeolites on radiolytic H2 production reveals the potential risk of using geological materials for remediation and long-term disposal of nuclear waste without consideration of their catalytic potential.
format Text
author Sauvage, Justine Flore
author_facet Sauvage, Justine Flore
author_sort Sauvage, Justine Flore
title Sedimentary Catalysis of Radiolytic Hydrogen Production
title_short Sedimentary Catalysis of Radiolytic Hydrogen Production
title_full Sedimentary Catalysis of Radiolytic Hydrogen Production
title_fullStr Sedimentary Catalysis of Radiolytic Hydrogen Production
title_full_unstemmed Sedimentary Catalysis of Radiolytic Hydrogen Production
title_sort sedimentary catalysis of radiolytic hydrogen production
publisher DigitalCommons@URI
publishDate 2018
url https://digitalcommons.uri.edu/dissertations/AAI10791561
geographic Pacific
geographic_facet Pacific
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_source Dissertations and Master's Theses (Campus Access)
op_relation https://digitalcommons.uri.edu/dissertations/AAI10791561
_version_ 1766137380783259648
spelling ftunivrhodeislan:oai:digitalcommons.uri.edu:dissertations-4083 2023-05-15T17:37:27+02:00 Sedimentary Catalysis of Radiolytic Hydrogen Production Sauvage, Justine Flore 2018-01-01T08:00:00Z https://digitalcommons.uri.edu/dissertations/AAI10791561 ENG eng DigitalCommons@URI https://digitalcommons.uri.edu/dissertations/AAI10791561 Dissertations and Master's Theses (Campus Access) Geology|Microbiology|Biogeochemistry text 2018 ftunivrhodeislan 2021-06-29T19:29:37Z Hydrogen (H2) and oxidants (O2 and H2O2) are naturally produced by radiolysis of water in any environment where water is bombarded by α, β, and γ radiation generated during radioactive decay. The production of radiolytic H2 in aqueous solutions and in some monomineral-water mixtures has been extensively studied, yet yields of radiolytic products in natural materials remain largely unexplored. Quantification of radiolytic production in common geological materials is critical to assess the importance of water radiolysis as source of microbial fuel and oxidants in water-containing subsurface environments. Knowledge of radiolytic production is also fundamental throughout the nuclear industry as the maintenance and development of nuclear reactors, long-term disposal of radioactive waste and the management of mixed waste storage tanks is intricately associated with radiolysis products. We experimentally quantified H2 yields for α- and γ-irradiation of pure water, seawater, and slurries of marine sediment, montmorillonite, and two natural zeolites (mordenite and clinoptilolite) widely used throughout the nuclear industry. The sediment samples include the dominant types found in the global ocean (abyssal clay, nannofossil-bearing clay [marl], clay-bearing diatom ooze, and nannofossil ooze). These experiments demonstrate that all common types of marine sediment and zeolites catalyze radiolytic H2 production. Hydrogen yields [G(H2)] differ from one geological material to another and range between 3.43 and 37.54 molecules H2 100eV-1 and 0.27 and 1.96 molecules H2 100eV -1 for α-particles and γ-rays induced water radiolysis, respectively. Abyssal clays, earth’s most widespread marine sediment type, exhibit the highest yield amplification when exposed to α-particles with an average factor increase of 18 relative to pure water. Siliceous ooze and abyssal clay exhibit the highest H2 yields when exposed to γ-rays, increasing production by factors of up to 8 and 4, respectively. Calcareous ooze (factor 5 amplification) and lithogeneous sediment (17% amplification) exhibit the smallest yield amplification under α-particle and γ-rays irradiation, respectively. Zeolite mineral slurries increase G(H2) for α- and γ-irradiation by factors of 13 and 4, respectively (similar to abyssal clay). Our results show that substrate chemistry and specific surface area are the main factors that control radiolytic H2 production. The mineral-catalysis of radiolytic H2 production has significant implications for: (i) sustenance of Earth’s subsurface microbial ecosystems (ii) habitability of other planetary bodies, and (iii) nuclear industrial activities. In electron equivalents per unit area, radiolytic H2 production in marine sediment locally produces up to 1% as much electron donor (food) as photosynthetic carbon fixation in the ocean. Although small relative to global photosynthetic biomass production, sediment-catalyzed production of radiolytic products is significant in the subseafloor. Our analysis of 9 sites in the North Atlantic, North and South Pacific suggests that H 2 is the primary microbial fuel in oxic organic-poor sediment older than a few million years. At these sites, calculated radiolytic H2 consumption rates are more than an order of magnitude higher than organic-matter oxidation rates. Radiolytic H2 is also a significant microbial electron donor in anoxic marine sediment older than a few million years. Oxidants from water radiolysis (O2 and H2O2) are significant electron acceptors in both oxic and anoxic sediment throughout the ocean. Discovery and quantification of the catalytic effect of clays and zeolites on radiolytic H2 production reveals the potential risk of using geological materials for remediation and long-term disposal of nuclear waste without consideration of their catalytic potential. Text North Atlantic University of Rhode Island: DigitalCommons@URI Pacific