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The hydrogen cycle consists of exchanges between (living) and abiotic (non-living) sources and sinks of hydrogen-containing compounds.

Hydrogen (H) is the most abundant element in the universe. On Earth, common H-containing inorganic molecules include water (H2O), hydrogen gas (H2), (H2S), and (NH3). Many organic compounds also contain H atoms, such as and . Given the ubiquity of hydrogen atoms in inorganic and organic chemical compounds, the hydrogen cycle is focused on molecular hydrogen, H2.

As a consequence of microbial metabolisms or naturally occurring rock-water interactions, hydrogen gas can be created. Other bacteria may then consume free H2, which may also be oxidised photochemically in the atmosphere or lost to space. Hydrogen is also thought to be an important reactant in and the early evolution of life on Earth, and potentially elsewhere in the .


Abiotic cycles

Sources
Abiotic sources of hydrogen gas include water-rock and photochemical reactions. Exothermic reactions between water and olivine minerals liberate H2 in the marine or terrestrial subsurface. In the ocean, hydrothermal vents erupt magma and altered seawater fluids including abundant H2, depending on the temperature regime and host rock composition. Molecular hydrogen can also be produced through photooxidation (via solar ) of some mineral species such as in anoxic aqueous environments. This may have been an important process in the upper regions of early Earth's oceans.


Sinks
Because H2 is the lightest element, atmospheric H2 can readily be lost to space via Jeans escape, an irreversible process that drives Earth's net mass loss. Photolysis of heavier compounds not prone to escape, such as CH4 or H2O, can also liberate H2 from the upper atmosphere and contribute to this process. Another major sink of free atmospheric H2 is photochemical oxidation by radicals (•OH), which forms water.

Anthropogenic sinks of H2 include synthetic fuel production through the Fischer-Tropsch reaction and artificial nitrogen fixation through the to produce nitrogen .


Biotic cycles
Many microbial metabolisms produce or consume H2.


Production
Hydrogen is produced by and enzymes in many microorganisms, some of which are being studied for their potential for biofuel production. These H2-metabolizing enzymes are found in all three domains of life, and out of known genomes over 30% of microbial taxa contain hydrogenase genes. Fermentation produces H2 from organic matter as part of the anaerobic microbial food chain
(2011). 9780199586936, Oxford University Press.
via light-dependent or light-independent pathways.


Consumption
Biological soil uptake is the dominant sink of atmospheric H2. Both and anaerobic metabolisms consume H2 by it in order to other compounds during respiration. Aerobic H2 oxidation is known as the Knallgas reaction.

Anaerobic H2 oxidation often occurs during interspecies hydrogen transfer in which H2 produced during is transferred to another organism, which uses the H2 to reduce CO2 to CH4 or , to H2S, or Fe3+ to Fe2+. Interspecies hydrogen transfer keeps H2 concentrations very low in most environments because fermentation becomes less thermodynamically favorable as the of H2 increases.


Relevance for the global climate
Hydrogen typically acts as an . This quality has implications for global atmospheric chemistry, possibly delaying the degradation and increasing the abundance of . This makes hydrogen an indirect greenhouse gas. For example, H2 can interfere with the removal of from the atmosphere. Typically, atmospheric CH4 is by radicals (OH), but H2 can also react with OH to reduce it to H2O.

CH4 + OH → CH3 + H2O
H2 + OH → H + H2O


Implications for astrobiology
Hydrothermal H2 may have played a major role in . Liberation of H2 by may have supported formation of the reactants proposed in the iron-sulfur world hypothesis.
9780511626180, Cambridge University Press.
The subsequent evolution of is hypothesized as one of the earliest on .

Serpentinization can occur on any planetary body with composition. The discovery of H2 on other , such as , suggests that similar processes are ongoing elsewhere in the , and potentially in other as well.


See also

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