Biogeochemical characterization of four depleted gas reservoirs for conversion into underground hydrogen storage

Author:

Bassani Ilaria1,Bellini Ruggero1,Vizzarro Arianna1,Coti Christian2,Pozzovivo Vincenzo2ORCID,Barbieri Donatella2,Pirri Candido Fabrizio13,Verga Francesca3,Menin Barbara14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Sustainable Future Technologies Fondazione Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia Turin Italy

2. Stogit‐Snam Crema Italy

3. Department of Applied Science and Technology Politecnico di Torino Turin Italy

4. National Research Council, Institute of Agricultural Biology and Biotechnology (CNR‐IBBA) Milan Italy

Abstract

AbstractDepleted gas reservoirs are a valuable option for underground hydrogen storage (UHS). However, different classes of microorganisms, which are capable of using free H2 as a reducing agent for their metabolism, inhabit deep underground formations and can potentially affect the storage. This study integrates metagenomics based on Illumina‐NGS sequencing of bacterial and archaeal 16S rRNA and dsrB and mcrA functional genes to unveil the composition and the variability of indigenous microbial populations of four Italian depleted reservoirs. The obtained mcrA sequences allow us to implement the existing taxonomic database for mcrA gene sequences with newly classified sequences obtained from the Italian gas reservoirs. Moreover, the KEGG and COG predictive functional annotation was used to highlight the metabolic pathways potentially associated with hydrogenotrophic metabolisms. The analyses revealed the specificity of each reservoir microbial community, and taxonomic and functional data highlighted the presence of an enriched number of taxa, whose activity depends on both reservoir hydrochemical composition and nutrient availability, of potential relevance in the context of UHS. This study is the very first to address the profiling of the microbial population and allowed us to perform a preliminary assessment of UHS feasibility in Italy.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Microbiology

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