On the average a fart is composed of about 59% nitrogen, 21% hydrogen, 9% carbon dioxide, 7% methane, and 4% oxygen. Less than 1% is what makes them stink.

The Surprising Science of What's Actually in Your Farts

2k viewsPosted 15 years agoUpdated 1 hour ago

You've probably never wondered about the exact molecular makeup of your flatulence—until now. Turns out, the average human fart follows a surprisingly consistent chemical recipe: 59% nitrogen, 21% hydrogen, 9% carbon dioxide, 7% methane, and 4% oxygen. That's over 99% of every toot you've ever produced, and none of it smells like anything at all.

The real troublemakers? That final less-than-1% composed of sulfur compounds that punch way above their weight class in the odor department.

The Odorless Majority

Most of the gas in your intestines comes from two sources: air you swallow and gases produced by bacteria breaking down food in your colon. Nitrogen and oxygen are mostly swallowed air that traveled through your digestive system. Carbon dioxide forms when stomach acid meets bicarbonate in your small intestine, plus some bacterial fermentation.

Hydrogen is entirely produced by gut bacteria processing undigested carbohydrates. Methane is the wildcard—only about 30-60% of people produce it at all, depending on which bacterial species have colonized their gut. If you're a methane producer, your farts are actually flammable (don't test this).

The Stink Factor

The real MVPs of fart smell are sulfur-containing compounds present in absolutely tiny amounts:

  • Hydrogen sulfide — Creates that classic rotten egg stench
  • Methanethiol — Smells like rotting vegetables or garlic
  • Dimethyl sulfide and dimethyl disulfide — Add to the overall funk

These compounds form when gut bacteria break down proteins containing sulfur-rich amino acids. Foods high in sulfur—like eggs, meat, garlic, onions, broccoli, and cabbage—give bacteria more raw material to work with, resulting in especially pungent productions.

Interestingly, skatole and indole—produced from the amino acid tryptophan—smell like mothballs and don't contribute much to typical fart odor, despite their ominous-sounding names.

Why the Variation?

Your personal gas composition varies based on what you eat, how much air you swallow, and which bacterial species call your colon home. High-fiber diets produce more hydrogen and carbon dioxide. Dairy products (if you're lactose intolerant) create more hydrogen. Beans and cruciferous vegetables ramp up all the fermentation gases.

The average person produces about 0.5 to 1.5 liters of gas daily, released in 10-20 farts. Most are silent, odorless, and utterly unremarkable from a chemistry standpoint. But that occasional eye-watering blast? That's when the sulfur compounds are having their moment.

Frequently Asked Questions

What gases make up a fart?
Farts are composed of nitrogen (59%), hydrogen (21%), carbon dioxide (9%), methane (7%), and oxygen (4%). Less than 1% consists of sulfur compounds that create the odor.
Why do some farts smell worse than others?
Smell intensity depends on sulfur content. Foods high in sulfur (eggs, meat, broccoli, garlic) produce more hydrogen sulfide and methanethiol, the compounds responsible for the rotten egg and garlic-like odors.
Are farts flammable?
Yes, if you produce methane. About 30-60% of people have gut bacteria that generate methane, making their farts technically combustible due to the hydrogen and methane content.
What causes hydrogen in farts?
Hydrogen is produced entirely by bacteria in your large intestine as they ferment undigested carbohydrates. High-fiber foods and certain sugars increase hydrogen production.
Why is most of a fart odorless?
Over 99% of fart gas consists of nitrogen, hydrogen, carbon dioxide, methane, and oxygen—all odorless. Only trace sulfur compounds create smell, despite making up less than 1% of the volume.

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