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The Effect of Grain Size on Porewater Radiolysis
Author(s) -
DeWitt J.,
McMahon S.,
Parnell J.
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
earth and space science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.843
H-Index - 23
ISSN - 2333-5084
DOI - 10.1029/2021ea002024
Subject(s) - radiolysis , uranium , grain size , thorium , sediment , mineralogy , hydrogen , radionuclide , geology , mineral , radiochemistry , chemistry , materials science , irradiation , physics , metallurgy , nuclear physics , paleontology , organic chemistry , geomorphology
The radiolysis of porewaters by uranium, thorium, and potassium in mineral grains is a recognized source of molecular hydrogen in rock‐hosted and sediment‐hosted fluids. This radiolytic hydrogen is of geomicrobiological interest as a potential energy source (electron donor) for microbial metabolism, especially in energy‐limited settings such as the marine deep biosphere or the subsurface of Mars. Previous efforts to predict the production of radiolytic hydrogen from columns of rock and sediment have tended to rely upon analytic models that cannot account for the attenuation of mineral radiation by grains larger than ∼30 µm. To address this, we have developed a Monte Carlo method to simulate the physics of mineral radiation and evaluate the production of H 2 as a function of mineral grain size and radioisotope composition. The results confirm that grain size is a major control on radiolytic H 2 yield. For example, using the standard geological classification of grain sizes, we find that clay can produce up to an order of magnitude more H 2 per unit time than sand. The magnitude of this effect is illustrated using compositional data from real geological units in order to demonstrate the dependence of radiolytic hydrogen flux on natural radionuclide concentration and bulk porosity.

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