Researchers discover massive geo-hydrogen source to the west of the Mussau Trench
2025-09-05
(Press-News.org)
Hydrogen is the most abundant element in the solar system. As a source of clean energy, hydrogen is well-suited for sustainable development, and Earth is a natural hydrogen factory. However, most hydrogen vents reported to date are small, and the geological processes responsible for hydrogen formation—as well as the quantities that can be preserved in geological settings—remain unclear.
To better understand the availability of geological hydrogen, researchers from the Institute of Oceanology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (IOCAS) and their collaborators discovered and analyzed a large pipe swarm—a cluster of cylindrical geological structures—with remnants of hydrogen hydrothermal activity on the east Caroline Plate, west of the Mussau Trench. The Mussau Trench is a fossil trench, meaning it is an ancient (started about 25 million years ago) and now inactive trench that ceased tectonic activity. The newly discovered pipe swarm, named "Kunlun," consists of pipes with diameters ranging from 450 to 1,800 meters.
The study was published in Science Advances on September 5.
Hydrothermal fluids—a mixture of heated water and dissolved minerals—spray out through small tubes, ranging in diameter from centimeters to sub-centimeters, along the sides of pockmarks (small, crater-like depressions) within large pipes, or through gaps or cracks in breccia piles (accumulations of angular rock fragments). Most of the breccias in the hydrothermal cracks are partially yellowish, likely due to microbial mats (layers of microorgAanisms).
Similar to other hydrothermal fields, hydrothermal biotas (communities of living organisms) are also found in the Kunlun pipe swarm. The scorpionfish—the ecosystem's apex predator—is commonly found in the Kunlun pipe swarm. Since the biomass of the apex predator should be far less than that of its prey, researchers expect a large amount of microbial mat to be found within piles of breccia at the bottom of the pipe swarm.
Additionally, more than 800 short-duration seismic events—small earthquakes—were detected over a period of 28 days along a 150-kilometer profile across the trench, indicating ongoing widespread active gas leakage across the entire Mussau Trench. Clumped nitrogen isotope analysis (a method for tracing gas origins) of a hydrothermal fluid sample revealed a dominant atmospheric gas component.
Previously reported hydrogen hydrothermal activity has been located near active plate margins, e.g., spreading ridges, or near active transform faults that expose mantle peridotite, such as the Lost City. In contrast, the large hydrogen-rich Kunlun hydrothermal fields are located about 80 kilometers from active plate margins.
These hydrothermal pipes have steep walls, with abundant breccias and several generations of smaller bowl-shaped pockmarks on the bottom, similar to those of kimberlite, indicating multiple generations of explosions. Using empirically derived blast energy estimates, the formation of such large pipes would require millions of tons of TNT.
The most likely source of energy for the formation of such large pipes is hydrogen. Compressed hydrogen can release a huge amount of energy. For example, one ton of hydrogen expanding adiabatically from 1500 bar to 400 bar—the pressure at the water depths of the Kunlun pipe swarm—can release the same amount of energy as 0.21 ton TNT. To form such pipes, a large amount of hydrogen would be needed. Alternatively, a mixture of hydrogen and oxygen would be highly explosive. One ton of hydrogen reacting with oxygen releases 143 GJ of heat, which is 150 times more energy than the amount released by physical expansion.
According to Prof. XIAO Yuanyuan, first author of the study, the results suggest a potentially huge amount of hydrogen may have been formed deep in the ocean lithospheric mantle. "It could be economically mineable in the future," said Prof. XIAO.
END
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
2025-09-05
A new study from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill shows that insect populations are rapidly declining even in relatively undisturbed landscapes, raising concerns about the health of ecosystems that depend on them.
Keith Sockman, associate professor of biology at UNC-Chapel Hill, quantified the abundance of flying insects during 15 seasons between 2004 and 2024 on a subalpine meadow in Colorado, a site with 38 years of weather data and minimal direct human impact. He discovered an average annual decline of 6.6% in insect abundance, amounting to a ...
2025-09-05
Breaking free from spectral limits
From thermal cameras to multispectral sensors, modern surveillance technologies are increasingly difficult to evade, creating urgent demand for camouflage that adapts across both visible and infrared bands. Yet progress has long been constrained by three persistent challenges: the tight coupling between visible color shifts and infrared emissivity, which forces trade-offs; the limited thermal modulation range of existing devices, typically <15 °C and insufficient for extreme environments such as deserts with >60 °C swings; and scalability constraints, with most prototypes restricted ...
2025-09-05
MD Anderson Research Highlights for September 5, 2025
Clinical trials show promising results in treating pancreatic and colorectal cancers
New treatment strategies improve outcomes for patients with kidney and testicular cancers
Novel research techniques enable advances in gene-drug interactions, breast cancer progression, and identifying pre-cancerous lesions
Biomarkers help predict risk for oral cancer metastasis
HOUSTON, SEPTEMBER 5, 2025 ― The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center’s Research Highlights showcases the latest breakthroughs in cancer care, research ...
2025-09-05
Imagine a clock that doesn’t have electricity, but its hands and gears spin on their own for all eternity.
In a new study, physicists at the University of Colorado Boulder have used liquid crystals, the same materials that are in your phone display, to create such a clock—or, at least, as close as humans can get to that idea. The team’s advancement is a new example of a “time crystal.” That’s the name for a curious phase of matter in which the pieces, such as atoms or other particles, exist in constant motion.
The researchers aren’t the first to make a time crystal, but their creation is the first that humans can actually ...
2025-09-05
The Europlanet Science Congress 2025 will be held jointly with the annual meeting of the American Astronomical Society’s Division of Planetary Science (EPSC-DPS2025) from 7–12 September 2025 at Finlandia Hall, Helsinki, Finland. With around 1800 participants expected to join in person and online, it will be the largest planetary science meeting held to date in Europe.
Press briefings will be livestreamed and press notices on presentations of interest to the media will be issued by the EPSC-DPS2025 ...
2025-09-05
Since their discovery at Drexel University in 2011, MXenes — a family of nanomaterials with unique properties of durability, conductivity and filtration, among many others — has become the largest known and fastest growing family of two-dimensional nanomaterials, with more than 50 unique MXene materials discovered to date. Experimentally synthesizing them and testing the physical properties of each material has been the labor of tens of thousands of scientists from more than 100 countries. But a recent discovery by a multi-university collaboration of researchers, led by Drexel University researcher Yury ...
2025-09-05
Chicago, IL — The JAMA Network announces the launch of JAMA+ Women’s Health, a new digital resource designed to elevate the visibility and accessibility of trusted, peer-reviewed content that advances health care for women across the globe.
Recognizing that women’s health is more comprehensive than reproductive care, gynecologic and breast cancer, and menopause, JAMA+ Women’s Health will showcase rigorous studies that include or focus exclusively on women from across JAMA and the 12 JAMA Network journals.
Linda Brubaker, MD, MS, the JAMA+ Women’s Health Editor in Chief, will curate the site.
“There’s ...
2025-09-05
Highly efficient controlling the individual atomic migration is the basis of the modern atomic manufacturing. Although one-by-one atom migration can be realized precisely by STM technique, such a delicate operation is time consuming and restrictive conditions (e.g., high-vacuum) is required.
A research team from the Institute of Modern Optics and the Center for Single Molecule Science at Nankai University, China, has now reported a breakthrough method to achieve efficient atomic migration under room temperature and atmospheric conditions. Their study, titled “Surface Plasmon Driven Atomic Migration Mediated by Molecular Monolayer,” was recently published in PhotoniX.
By ...
2025-09-05
Five researchers from the University of Groningen, the Netherlands, have been awarded an ERC Starting Grant. They are Michael Lerch, Loredana Protesescu, Tim Lichtenberg and Alexander Belyy from the Faculty of Science and Engineering, and Miles Wischnewski from the Faculty of Behavioural and Social Sciences.
The European Research Council's (ERC) Starting Grants amount to €1.5 million each, for a period of five years. The grants are intended for outstanding researchers with the aim of stimulating cutting-edge research in Europe.
Miles Wischnewski: The role of phase coding in memory processing
Imagine walking into a room ...
2025-09-05
Organ donors can save lives, for example those of patients with kidney failure. Unfortunately, there are too few donors, and the waiting lists are long. 3D bioprinting of (parts of) organs may offer a solution to this shortage in the future. But printing living tissues, bioprinting, is extremely complex and challenging.
The team of Riccardo Levato at UMC Utrecht and Utrecht University is now taking an important step toward printing implantable tissues. Using computer vision, a branch of artificial intelligence (AI), they’ve developed a 3D printer that doesn’t just print, it also sees and ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
[Press-News.org] Researchers discover massive geo-hydrogen source to the west of the Mussau Trench