News and Events
- Professor Andrew Keane elevated to IEEE Fellow
- UCD Engineering Spin-out Secures €6 Million to Accelerate Development of Groundbreaking Blood Flow Tech
- CDIC Automotive Design Competition 2024
- Teaching and Learning Awards
- Aisling Ní Annaidh recognised as a pioneer in her field through an ERC Consolidator Award
- Highly Cited: UCD researchers named amongst 2024’s most influential
- ESTEEM Graduate Programme
- Scientists’ next-generation space materials blast off for tests on ISS
- Competition! Celebrating John Stewart Bell’s Legacy
- Minister O’Donovan announces €26million for 40 research projects
- Engineering Class of 1958
- Professor Anding Zhu elected IEEE MTT-S President
- Bridges and Bytes – Launching the Student Voice on AI and Assessment
- European Research Council Funds Cutting-Edge Irish Research into Microplastics and Traumatic Brain Injury
- Professor Finola O'Kane appointed as a Senior Fellow at Dumbarton Oaks
- SBFE research fellow Xiaohui Lin receives the MSCA DOROTHY COFUND award
- Upskill with UCD’s engineering micro-credentials
- Minister O’Donovan announces funding boost for early career researchers
- Recent Lab visit by UCD Engineering & Architecture to Sheffield University Diamond Centre
- UCD Stormwater Runoff Research featured in Nicola Haines Team
- Madeleine Lowery among UCD Researchers recognised in SFI Frontiers for the Future Awards
- UCD’s LaNua Medical Wins Big Ideas Award at Enterprise Ireland’s Start-Up Day 2024
- Robotics Competition
- Congratulations to All the Winners of this years NovaUCD Awards
- Irish National Doctoral Research Cohort on Floating Offshore Wind Dynamic Cables is formed
- UCD and Northeastern University extend and deepen long-standing partnership with five collaborative research projects
- EPA announces €14.3M in new research funding
- Arup Scholarship Awards 2024
- UCD names new Vice-President for Equality, Diversity and Inclusion
- Project promoting safe staffing in the healthcare system wins UCD Research Impact Competition
- VOICE Project Launches to Shape Tomorrow's Sustainability
- Archives
- 2023 News Archive
- 2022 News Archive
- 2021 News Archive
- 2020 News Archive
- 2019 News Archive
- 2018 News Archive
- 2017 News Archive
- Accelerate your career with UCD’s Master of Engineering Management
- Irish Academy of Engineering Parsons Medal Winner
- Professor Da-Wen Sun Elected as a Foreign Member of PAN
- PolliNation Takes Top Spot at Sustainability LaunchPad Awards 2017
- Dr Edmond Harty awarded prestigious 2017 Parsons Medal
- Intel continues its commitment to Women in Technology
- 2017 NUI Awards names two UCD Engineering Students
- Professor Da-Wen Sun named as Highly Cited Researcher in the 3rd Year
- Prof John Kelly awarded ESB Outstanding Contribution to Engineering
- UCD Engineering PhD student chosen as Climate Change Ambassador
- UCD Engineer named as IT & Tech Professional of the Year 2017
- Barry Brophy Interview on Tubridy Show with Dave Fanning
- Constructed wetlands: from waste to oasis
- Giant fat blobs, known as fatbergs, are the scourge of London's aging
- How can we make cities better places to live, asks new UCD centre
- The Inchicore Model School: a 21st-century design on education
- Electric-field boost to water flow in protein
- How much traffic can this bridge safely take?
- Technology for all: towards truly inclusive design
- UCD PhD student, Eduardo Morais wins award at conference
- Energy-saving UCD technology breathes life into wastewater treatment
- A fresh look at freezing foods: new technology to preserve nutrients
- UCD honorary degree for Sir Ciarán Devane
- Maintaining the balance of power – through engineering
- Eco-Plan: Upping the game for green spaces in urban planning
- Engineering a smarter treatment for Parkinson’s disease
- 3D printing to revolutionise medical devices
- Smart science to power the Internet of Things
- Getting up close with chemistry
- Former UCD School of Civil Engineering Professor Debra Laefer release
- UCD PhD candidate wins Royal Academy of Engineering early-stage career
- BOC Gases supports research and development in UCD
- Saudi Aramco Takes Stake in UCD Spin out
- Two UCD academics receive a 2017-2018 Fulbright Irish Award
- Grafton Architects receive Architecture award
- Royal Irish Academy elects UCD academics
- Professor Gerry Byrne receives the Fraunhofer Thaler Award
- Dr Edmond Harty appointed as Adjunct Full Professor
- UCD engineers named among Ten Outstanding Young People in Ireland
- Teaching Awards for College Academic Staff
- ENBIO Secures €650,000 Contract with European Space Agency
- Science Foundation Ireland to Invest in 4 New research centres
- Inclusive design to help people with autism & intellectual disability
- UCD professor takes a close look at the chemistry of water
- UCD Engineers receive Outstanding Young People Award
- iSCAPE - Improving the Smart Control of Air Pollution in Europe
- QS Rankings
- UCD Engineering Student announced as winner of the inaugural Engineers
- Dynamic System Modelling Workshop
- Smart CITIES & ENGINEERING for Sustainable Architecture
- Consultation Event on the National Planning Framework
- Seeking to encourage girls in civil engineering
- UCD SBFE Assoc Professor Featured in Irish Times Article
- Stimulating the brain to treat Parkinson’s disease
- UCD SBFE PhD student elected to CIEEM Irish section committee
- UCD SBFE Lecturer contributes to Irish Times article
- Earth’s water may have been formed in its mantle
- Professor David FitzPatrick awarded 23rd RAMI Silver Medal
- UCD SBFE Assoc Prof Aoife Gowen featured in "Women on Walls" Campaign
- Forbes 30 Under 30 Europe features UCD Engineer Colin Keogh
- 2016 News Archive
- Building the State
- A Centenary Celebration
Earth's water may have originally been formed deep within its mantle, study shows
Monday, 27 February, 2017
Earth’s water may have originally been formed by chemical reactions deep within the planet’s mantle, according to research led by University College Dublin.
The new theory offers an alternative explanation as to how the life-giving liquid may have originated on Earth. Previously, scientists have suggested that comets that collided with the planet could have deposited large amounts of ice on the Earth which later melted, forming water.
The investigators carried out computer simulations which found that reactions between high-pressure and high-temperature fluid hydrogen and silicon dioxide in quartz, found in Earth’s upper mantle, can form liquid water under the right conditions.
Pictured top: A new study led by a team of scientists at UCD shows that a reaction between silicon dioxide that is found in quartz crystals (picture) (Photo credit - (opens in a new window)flickr-jgsgeology) and fluid hydrogen at high temperatures and pressure, found in the earth's upper mantle, can create water; and below, Youtube clip from Beyond Science with details on discovery by scientists in 2014 that vast 'ocean-like' quantities of water are located 600 miles below surface of Earth
The simulations were carried out by Dr Zdenek Futera, UCD School of Chemical and Bioprocess Engineering, under the direction of Profesor Niall English, UCD School of Chemical and Bioprocess Engineering, and the Materials, Energy and Water Simulations research group. The team at UCD also worked closely with co-author of the paper, Professor John Tse, (opens in a new window)University of Saskatchewan in Canada.
The exercise tested the reaction at different temperatures and pressures typically found in the upper mantle 40 to 400km below the surface of the Earth.
The simulations revealed that the silica and fluid hydrogen could form water when exposed to temperatures of just over 1400°C and at pressure 20,000 times higher than Earth’s atmospheric pressure.
Silica is found in abundance above and below the surface of the earth in the form of the mineral quartz – the Earth’s crust is 59 per cent silica.
The scientists had expected that the water would form on the surface of the silica, but instead, they were surprised to find that the water remained trapped inside the silica, leading to a massive build up of pressure.
They also believe the release of this pressure could be responsible for triggering earthquakes hundreds of kilometres below the Earth’s surface.
The new findings support the experiments on the same reaction between silicon dioxide and liquid hydrogen carried out by Japanese scientists in 2014.
"We were initially surprised to see in-rock reactions, but we then realised that we had explained the puzzling mechanism at the base of earlier Japanese experimental work finding water formation,” said Prof English.
“We concluded that these findings help to rationalise, in vivid detail, the in-mantle genesis of water. This is very exciting and in accord with very recent findings of an 'ocean's worth' of water in the Earth's mantle.
"We thank (opens in a new window)Science Foundation Ireland and our collaborators at the University of Saskatchewan, and the Ireland-Canada Foundation for 'seeding' this 20-paper collaboration with Professor John Tse ten years ago."
The findings were published in (opens in a new window)Earth and Planetary Science Letters.
Various studies in recent years have also suggested that vast quantities of water are stored in rocks as far as 1000km below the surface of the Earth.
The paper is entitled: (opens in a new window)Formation and properties of water from quartz and hydrogen at high pressure and temperature.
By: Jamie Deasy, digital journalist, UCD University Relations.