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Kinetics of H2–O2–H2O redox equilibria and formation of metastable H2O2 under low temperature hydrothermal conditions
Authors
Alain
Balk
+74 more
Bethke
Bethke
Borda
Campbell
Campbell
Chinta
Chivian
Choudhary
Choudhary
Cohn
Corliss
Costa
Croiset
Davies
Ding
Ding
Dionysis I. Foustoukos
Dissanayake
Dissanayake
Edmond
Edwards
Edwards
Edwards
Foustoukos
George D. Cody
Gomes
Gotz
Gyulkhandanyan
Han
Hernandez
Hiroki
Hurowitz
Jennifer L. Houghton
Kamei
Kelley
Kwan
Landon
Lang
Lin
Lin
Lindberg
Lunsford
Luther
Markert
McCollom
McCollom
McKenney
Miroshnichenko
Moura
Nakagawa
Nakagawa
Nakagawa
Nakagawa
Nakagawa
Pospelova
Pospelova
Reysenbach
Reysenbach
Schlitzer
Seaver
Seaver
Seewald
Seewald
Seyfried
Stefan M. Sievert
Strohm
Takagi
Takai
Takai
Tivey
Vetriani
Voordeckers
William E. Seyfried
Zhou
Publication date
23 July 2010
Publisher
'Elsevier BV'
Doi
Abstract
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2010. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Elsevier B.V. for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 75 (2011): 1594-1607, doi:10.1016/j.gca.2010.12.020.Hydrothermal experiments were conducted to evaluate the kinetics of H2(aq) oxidation in the homogeneous H2-O2-H2O system at conditions reflecting subsurface/near-seafloor hydrothermal environments (55-250 oC and 242-497 bar). The kinetics of the water-forming reaction that controls the fundamental equilibrium between dissolved H2(aq) and O2(aq), are expected to impose significant constraints on the redox gradients that develop when mixing occurs between oxygenated seawater and high- temperature anoxic vent fluid at near-seafloor conditions. Experimental data indicate that, indeed, the kinetics of H2(aq)-O2(aq) equilibrium become slower with decreasing temperature, allowing excess H2(aq) to remain in solution. Sluggish reaction rates of H2(aq) oxidation suggest that active microbial populations in near-seafloor and subsurface environments could potentially utilize both H2(aq) and O2(aq), even at temperatures lower than 40 oC due to H2(aq) persistence in the seawater/vent fluid mixtures. For these H2-O2 disequilibrium conditions, redox gradients along the seawater/hydrothermal fluid mixing interface are not sharp and microbially-mediated H2(aq) oxidation coupled with a lack of other electron acceptors (e.g. nitrate) could provide an important energy source available at low-temperature diffuse flow vent sites. More importantly, when H2(aq)-O2(aq) disequilibrium conditions apply, formation of metastable hydrogen peroxide is observed. The yield of H2O2(aq) synthesis appears to be enhanced under conditions of elevated H2(aq)/O2(aq) molar ratios that correspond to abundant H2(aq) concentrations. Formation of metastable H2O2 is expected to affect the distribution of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) owing to the existence of an additional strong oxidizing agent. Oxidation of magnetite and/or Fe++ by hydrogen peroxide could also induce formation of metastable hydroxyl radicals (•OH) through Fenton-type reactions, further broadening the implications of hydrogen peroxide in hydrothermal environments.This research was conducted with partial support from the NSF OCE-0752221 and the Geophysical Laboratory Postdoctoral Fellowship. We would also like to acknowledge contributions by the W.M. Keck Foundation and Shell towards supporting the hydrothermal lab at the Geophysical Lab. SMS acknowledges support from NSF OCE-0452333 and the Alfried-Krupp Wissenschaftskolleg Greifswald (Germany), while WES acknowledges support from NSF grants OCE-0549457 and OCE- 0813861
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