Abstract

AbstractSubmarine volcanos are the most active areas in the deep sea, but the environmental consequences of frequent volcanic activity on the geophysical fields and biogeochemical processes near hydrothermal chimneys have not been fully understood yet. In particular, how continuous high‐flux thermal energy, the most typical form of energy in active submarine volcanic systems, affects electron transport and geoelectric field remains unknown. This study provides the first evidence that thermal energy can be efficiently converted to electrical energy at an extremely small spatial scale of the submarine black chimneys. The Seebeck coefficient of sulfide chimneys can reach more than 200 μV/K, with high electrical conductivity of 104 S/m and low thermal conductivity of 1.0 W/(m·K) within 300–700 K. A maximal potential gradient of 300 mV/cm under a temperature difference of 300–700 K can be generated by the thermoelectric conversion of sulfide chimneys, with a maximum energy converting efficiency up to 1%. The thermoelectric conversion effect of a global‐scale submarine volcanos could enable electroactive bacteria to fix appromaxiately 105–106 tons of carbon per year. In addition, the thermal‐electrochemical experiments indicated sulfides underwent rapid oxidation under thermoelectric effects, which may help explain the intense oxidative weathering of sulfides in some anoxic deep‐sea hydrothermal zones.

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