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molecular hydrogen

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Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 17 June 2025
GSA Bulletin (2025)
... Tracking molecular hydrogen migration along a subduction shear zone Ritabrata Dobe1 Francesco Giuntoli1, Orlando Sèbastien Olivieri1, Guillaume Siron2, Giulio Viola1, Luca Menegon3, and Alberto Vitale Brovarone1,4,5 1 Dipartimento di Scienze biologiche, geologiche e ambientali, Alma Mater Studiorum...
Journal Article
Journal: Elements
Published: 01 February 2020
Elements (2020) 16 (1): 19–24.
...Frieder Klein; Jesse D. Tarnas; Wolfgang Bach The capacity for molecular hydrogen (H 2 ) to hydrogenate oxygen and carbon is critical to the origin of life and represents the basis for all known life-forms. Major sources of H 2 that strictly involve nonbiological processes and inorganic reactants...
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Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 October 1947
AAPG Bulletin (1947) 31 (10): 1709–1751.
...Claude E. Zobell ABSTRACT Molecular hydrogen is produced by a large number of bacterial species, many of which occur in marine sediments. Such bacteria have been demonstrated in marine bottom deposits, oil-bearing sands, and in reservoir fluids from oil wells. Up to 10,000 hydrogen-producing...
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Journal Article
Published: 14 June 2019
Bulletin de la Société Géologique de France (2019) 190 (1): 7.
... applications, and for which no experimental data are currently available. For these simulations, molecular models have been selected for hydrogen, water and Na + and Cl − to reproduce phase properties of pure components and brine densities. To model solvent-solutes and solutes-solutes interactions...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 August 2016
Clays and Clay Minerals (2016) 64 (4): 452–471.
... was performed for several smectite models. The smectite layers were described using a modified CLAYFF force field, where the intramolecular vibrations of H 2 O were described more accurately by the Toukan-Rahman potential. The power spectra of molecular vibrations of hydrogens were calculated for selected sub...
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First thumbnail for: STRUCTURE AND DYNAMICS OF WATER–SMECTITE INTERFACE...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 January 2001
Reviews in Mineralogy and Geochemistry (2001) 42 (1): 83–129.
... literature ( Seward and Barnes 1997 ). At the same time, amplified by the increasing demand for the detailed molecular understanding of the structure and properties of high-temperature aqueous fluids from the geochemical and engineering communities, this controversy over the degree of hydrogen bonding...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 December 1981
Clays and Clay Minerals (1981) 29 (6): 435–445.
Journal Article
Published: 01 December 1977
American Mineralogist (1977) 62 (11-12): 1135–1143.
... located and their positions refined. The crystal structure consists of a molecular complex, [Mg(H 2 O) 5 B 4 O 5 (OH) 4 ], and two water molecules, hydrogen-bonded into a three-dimensional framework; the molecular complex consists of a [Mg(H 2 O) 5 (OH)] octahedron and the tetraborate polyanion [B 4 O 5...
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Flow diagram of known global molecular hydrogen sources (in Roman text) and sinks (in italic text) expressed as Tg H2 y–1. VOC = volatile organic compounds. Asterisked data sources as follows: * = Ehhalt and Rohrer (2009); ** = Sherwood Lollar et al. (2014); *** = Stacey L. Worman (2015, unpublished PhD thesis, Duke University).
Published: 01 February 2020
Figure 3. Flow diagram of known global molecular hydrogen sources (in Roman text) and sinks (in italic text) expressed as Tg H 2 y –1 . VOC = volatile organic compounds. Asterisked data sources as follows: * = Ehhalt and Rohrer (2009) ; ** = Sherwood Lollar et al. (2014) ; *** = Stacey L
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A model for the reduction of the RuS2 (111) surface by molecular hydrogen, based on ab initio calculations. Redrawn after Frechard and Sautet (1997b).
Published: 01 January 2006
Figure 20. A model for the reduction of the RuS 2 (111) surface by molecular hydrogen, based on ab initio calculations. Redrawn after Frechard and Sautet (1997b) .
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Published: 01 October 1947
TABLE VII SOME NATURAL GASES IN WHICH MOLECULAR HYDROGEN HAS BEEN REPORTED TO BE PRESENT (These Data Should Be Viewed with Caution-C.E.Z.)
Journal Article
Published: 14 June 2021
The Canadian Mineralogist (2021) 59 (2): 321–336.
.... The two pentagons point in opposite directions. Hydrogen-bond analysis shows that the hydroxyl groups are linked by complex polyfurcated, intra-molecular hydrogen bonds forming a web-like network coating the walls of the channels. The longest distance between hydrogens (7.226 Å) is observed...
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Journal Article
Journal: Elements
Published: 01 February 2020
Elements (2020) 16 (1): 13–18.
...Figure 3. Flow diagram of known global molecular hydrogen sources (in Roman text) and sinks (in italic text) expressed as Tg H 2 y –1 . VOC = volatile organic compounds. Asterisked data sources as follows: * = Ehhalt and Rohrer (2009) ; ** = Sherwood Lollar et al. (2014) ; *** = Stacey L...
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Series: GSA Special Papers
Published: 03 May 2022
DOI: 10.1130/2021.2553(12)
EISBN: 9780813795539
... be referred to as tectonic hydrogen and tectonic oxygen. Tectonic hydrogen could be a potential energy source for deep subsurface and glacier-bedrock interface microbial communities that rely on molecular hydrogen for metabolism. Tectonic oxygen may have been an important oxidizing agent when dissolved...
Journal Article
Journal: Geology
Published: 01 February 2014
Geology (2014) 42 (2): 135–138.
...Frieder Klein; Wolfgang Bach; Susan E. Humphris; Wolf-Achim Kahl; Niels Jöns; Bruce Moskowitz; Thelma S. Berquó Abstract Serpentinization of mantle peridotite generates molecular hydrogen that can be exploited by microorganisms to gain metabolic energy; however, the mechanisms that control hydrogen...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 March 2019
American Mineralogist (2019) 104 (3): 385–390.
... is not molecular hydrogen but molecular water. The diffusivity and activation energy for the fast water diffusion can be explained by the correlation between diffusivities of noble gases in silica glass and their sizes. Because noble gases diffuse through free volume in the glass structure, we conclude...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 November 2018
American Mineralogist (2018) 103 (11): 1780–1788.
.../melt values for reduced nitrogen and molecular hydrogen are in the 6–10 and 6–12 range with Δ H values of –5.9 ± 0.9 and = 8 ± 6 kJ/mol, respectively. A change in redox conditions during melting and crystallization in the Earth sufficient to alter oxidized to reduced carbon- and nitrogen-bearing...
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Journal Article
Published: 01 March 1952
Journal of Sedimentary Research (1952) 22 (1): 42–49.
... bacteria found in sediments catalyze the oxidation of molecular hydrogen with the formation of methane, hydrogen sulfide, saturated compounds, and other substances that may occur in oil fields. Crude oil in contact with water may be slowly modified in various ways by bacterial activity. Bacteria may...
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Schematic diagram illustrating the plausible formation of native nickel and nickel–iron alloys as a result of the reaction of olivine with water. After Schrauzer and Guth (1976) and Janecky and Seyfried (1986). The yellow ellipses highlight the fate of the metals involved and the formation of molecular hydrogen. Molecular hydrogen under these conditions reacts with inorganic carbon and nitrogen (Schrenk et al. 2013). The presence of the Ni–Fe alloys, such as awaruite, catalyze these processes. (Inset) Scanning electron microscope image of olivine (large dull crystals covered with a crust secondary Fe minerals) with small (50–100 nm) Ni–Fe–S phases (bright phases) formed during serpentinization in the presence of H2S. From an unpublished experimental study by Smirnov.
Published: 01 December 2016
involved and the formation of molecular hydrogen. Molecular hydrogen under these conditions reacts with inorganic carbon and nitrogen ( Schrenk et al. 2013 ). The presence of the Ni–Fe alloys, such as awaruite, catalyze these processes. ( I nset ) Scanning electron microscope image of olivine (large dull
Journal Article
Journal: Geology
Published: 27 January 2023
Geology (2023) 51 (3): 284–289.
... cycle. As a by-product of serpentinization, molecular hydrogen (H 2 ) is generated, which supports chemosynthetic communities, and this mechanism may have driven the origin of life on early Earth. At continent-ocean transition zones (COTs) of magma-poor rifted margins, the mantle is exposed and hydrated...
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