Hydrogen clouds don't even make up a small component of dark matter, because hydrogen is not dark. The image below depicts the emission spectrum of hydrogen in the visible regime (a.k.a., the Balmer series).
The emission spectrum of dark matter on the other hand would be completely black.
Dark matter is gets its name from the fact that it doesn't absorb or emit light, i.e., electromagnetic radiation. From an elementary particle standpoint, this means dark matter particles can't interact with photons via the electromagnetic force at all, so dark matter particles must be electrically neutral, which electrons and protons certainly are not. No electrons are protons means no hydrogen atoms.
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