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1.
We developed a simple measurement system for delta17O in nanomole quantities of CO2 using continuous flow isotope ratio mass spectrometry (CF-IRMS). The analytical system consisted of a sample injection system, a helium-purged CO2 purification line, a capillary GC, a combustion unit, and CF-IRMS. A unique feature of the system is that we use molecular CO2 to determine the isotopic compositions including delta17O. The delta17O of CO2 in a sample is calculated from the mass ratios of both 45/44 and 46/44 of two different kinds of CO2, which have been purified quantitatively from different aliquots of a sample. While one aliquot (rCO2) flows into IRMS directly, the other (eCO2) flows through a CuO unit (900 degrees C) prior to injection into IRMS, to exchange oxygen atoms in the sample CO2 molecules with those in CuO for which we can assume Delta17O = 0. In our system, we introduce both rCO2 and eCO2 alternately to IRMS repeatedly by using an automatic multianalytical system to improve analytical precision statistically. The standard deviation of 0.35 per thousand for Delta17O can be realized using as little as 8.7 nmol CO2 in a approximately 3-h analysis. Based on this system, we have quantified delta17O in the stratospheric CO2 over Japan.  相似文献   

2.
We report here the first coupling of fast GC to IRMS, in a system capable of 250 ms peak widths (fwhm) at 1 mL/min flow rates, one-fifth as narrow as any previously reported GCC-IRMS system. We developed an optimized postcolumn interface that results in minimal peak broadening, using a programmable temperature vaporization injector in place of a rotary valve or backflush system to divert solvent, a narrow capillary combustion reactor followed by a cryogenic water trap with narrow-bore (<0.20 mm i.d.) transfer lines, and a narrow i.d. open split to the IRMS directly inserted into the column effluent. Quantitative combustion was demonstrated with CH4 injections. A comparison of CO2 injections with different fwhm peak widths (250, 2500, and 7500 ms) showed similar precisions, SD(delta13C)=0.2-0.3 per thousand, for injections of >600 pmol C on column; precision for the narrow peaks (250 ms) was considerably better for injections<150 pmol C on column. SD(delta13C)<1 per thousand was achievable for injections of 5-15 pmol on column for 250 ms wide peaks, 10-fold better precision than 2500 ms wide peaks, and within a factor of 3 of the counting statistics limit. For a mixture of 15 fatty acid methyl esters (FAME), 1.5 nmol C of each on column yielded typical SD(delta13Cpdb)=0.4 per thousand for fast GC and 0.5 per thousand for conventional GC. For 14 of the 15 FAME, delta13C values between the two systems were within+/-1.5 per thousand and not significantly different. Fast GCC-IRMS required one-third the run time (450 s vs 1400 s) to achieve comparable resolution. Mean peak widths for fast GCC-IRMS of the FAME were 720 ms, compared to 650 ms by fast GC with flame ionization detection. At a 15-fold dilution (100 pmol C on column for each FAME), fast GCC-IRMS achieved approximately 2-fold better precision and accuracy than similar injections on conventional GCC-IRMS. Finally, a mixture of 10 steroids (approximately 7 nmol C (100 ng) each on column) was analyzed with mean precision of SD(delta13C)=0.2 per thousand in 620 s by fast GCC-IRMS, while conventional GCC-IRMS required 1200 s and achieved poorer resolution. delta13C values for the two system were similar (Deltadelta13C1 nmol C) and achieves modest precision (approximately 1 per thousand) near the counting statistics limit on low level components.  相似文献   

3.
The utility of liquid chromatography coupled to the isotope ratio mass spectrometry technique (LC-IRMS) has already been established through a variety of successful applications. However, the analytical constraint related to the use of aqueous mobile phases limits the LC separation mechanism. We report here a new strategy for high-precision (13)C isotopic analyses based on temperature-programmed LC-IRMS using aqueous mobile phases. Under these conditions, the isotopic precision and accuracy were studied. On one hand, experiments were carried out with phenolic acids using isothermal LC conditions at high temperature (170 degrees C); on the other hand, several experiments were performed by ramping the temperature, as conventionally used in a gas chromatography-based method with hydrosoluble fatty acids and pulses of CO 2 reference gas. In isothermal conditions at 170 degrees C, despite the increase of the CO 2 background, p-coumaric acid and its glucuronide conjugate gave reliable isotopic ratios compared to flow injection analysis-isotopic ratio mass spectrometry (FIA-IRMS) analyses (isotopic precision and accuracy are lower than 0.3 per thousand). On the opposite, for its sulfate conjugate, the isotopic accuracy is affected by its coelution with p-coumaric acid. Not surprisingly, this study also demonstrates that at high temperature (170 degrees C), a compound eluting with long residence time (i.e., ferulic acid) is degraded, affecting thus the delta (13)C (drift of 3 per thousand) and the peak area (compared to FIA-IRMS analysis at room temperature). Quantitation is also reported in isothermal conditions for p-coumaric acid in the range of 10-400 ng/mL and with benzoic acid as an internal standard. For temperature gradient LC-IRMS, in the area of the LC gradient (set up at 20 degrees C/min), the drift of the background observed produces a nonlinearity of SD (delta (13)C) approximately 0.01 per thousand/mV. To circumvent this drift, which impacts severely the precision and accuracy, an alternative approach, i.e., eluting the compound on the plateau of temperature studied was reported here. Other experiments with temperature-programmed LC-IRMS experiments are also reported with the presence of methanol in the injected solution to mimic residual solvent originating from the sample preparation or to slightly increase the solubility of the targeted compound for high-precision measurement.  相似文献   

4.
We have constructed a cavity ring-down spectrometer employing a near-IR external cavity diode laser capable of measuring 13C/12C isotopic ratios in CO2 in human breath. The system, which has a demonstrated minimum detectable absorption loss of 3.2 x 10(-11) cm(-1) Hz(-1/2), determines the isotopic ratio of 13C16O16O/12C16O16O by measuring the intensities of rotationally resolved absorption features of each species. As in isotope ratio mass spectrometry (IRMS), the isotopic ratio of a sample is compared to that of a standard CO2 sample calibrated to the Pee Dee Belemnite scale and reported as the sample's delta13C value. Measurements of eight replicate CO2 samples standardized by IRMS and consisting of 5% CO2 in N2 at atmospheric pressure demonstrated a precision of 0.22/1000 for the technique. Delta13C values were also obtained for breath samples from individuals testing positive and negative for the presence of Helicobacter pylori, the leading cause of peptic ulcers in humans. This study demonstrates the ability of the instrument to obtain delta13C values in breath samples with sufficient precision to serve as a useful medical diagnostic.  相似文献   

5.
A thermal decomposition method was developed and tested for the simultaneous determination of delta 18O and delta 17O in nitrate. The thermal decomposition of AgNO3 allows for the rapid and accurate determination of 18O/ 16O and 17O/16O isotopic ratios with a precision of +/- 1.5 per thousand for delta 18O and +/- 0.11 per thousand for delta 17O (delta 17O = delta 17O - 0.52 x delta 18O). The international nitrate isotope reference material IAEA-NO3 yielded a delta 18O value of +23.6 per thousand and delta 17O of -0.2 per thousand, consistent with normal terrestrial mass-dependent isotopic ratios. In contrast, a large sample of NaNO3 from the Atacama Desert, Chile, was found to have delta 17O = 21.56 +/- 0.11 per thousand and delta 18O = 54.9 +/- 1.5 per thousand, demonstrating a substantial mass-independent isotopic composition consistent with the proposed atmospheric origin of the desert nitrate. It is suggested that this sample (designated USGS-35) can be used to generate other gases (CO2, CO, N2O, O2) with the same delta 17O to serve as measurement references for a variety of applications involving mass-independent isotopic compositions in environmental studies.  相似文献   

6.
We describe a moving-wire analyzer for measuring 13C in dissolved, involatile organic materials. Liquid samples are first deposited and dried on a continuously spooling nickel wire. The residual sample is then combusted as the wire moves through a furnace, and the evolved CO2 is analyzed by continuous-flow isotope ratio mass spectrometry. A typical analysis requires 1 microL of sample solution and produces a CO2 peak approximately 5 s wide. The system can measure "bulk" delta13C values of approximately 10 nmol of organic carbon with precision better than 0.2 per thousand. For samples containing approximately 1 nmol of C, precision is approximately 1 per thousand. Precision and sensitivity are limited mainly by background noise derived from carbon within the wire. Instrument conditions minimizing that background are discussed in detail. Accuracy is better than 0.5 per thousand for nearly all dissolved analytes tested, including lipids, proteins, nucleic acids, sugars, halocarbons, and hydrocarbons. The sensitivity demonstrated here for 13C measurements represents a approximately 1000-fold improvement relative to existing elemental analyzers and should allow the use of many new preparative techniques for collecting and purifying nonvolatile biochemicals for isotopic analysis.  相似文献   

7.
We report the first coupling of comprehensive two-dimensional gas chromatography (GC x GC) to online combustion isotope ratio mass spectrometry (C-IRMS). A GC x GC system, equipped with a longitudinally modulated cryogenic system (LMCS), was interfaced to an optimized low dead volume combustion interface to preserve <300 ms full width at half-maximum (fwhm) fast GC peaks generated on the second GC column (GC2). The IRMS detector amplifiers were modified by configuration of resistors and capacitors to enable fast response, and a home-built system acquired data at 25 Hz. Software was home-written to handle isotopic time shifts of less than one bin (40 ms) and to integrate peak slices to recover isotope ratios from cryogenically sliced peaks. The performance of the GC x GCC-IRMS system was evaluated by isotopic analysis of urinary steroid standards. Steroids were separated by a nonpolar GC1 column (30 m x 0.25 mm, 5% phenyl), modulated into multiple 4- or 8-s cryogenic slices by the LMCS, and then separated on a polar GC2 column (1 or 2 m x 0.1 mm, 50% phenyl). GC2 peak widths from a 1-m column averaged 276 ms fwhm. Steroid standard sliced peaks were successfully reconstructed to yield delta(13)C VPDB values with average precisions of SD(delta(13)C) = 0.30 per thousand and average accuracies within 0.34 per thousand, at 8 ng on column. Two steroids, coeluting in GC1, were baseline separated in GC2 and resulted in delta(13)C VPDB values with average precisions of SD(delta(13)C) = 0.86 per thousand and average accuracies within 0.26 per thousand, at 3 ng on column. Results from this prototype system demonstrate that the enhanced peak capacity and signal available in GC x GC is compatible with high-precision carbon isotope analysis.  相似文献   

8.
Carbon isotope ratios in higher-plant organic matter (delta(13)C(plant)) have been shown in several studies to be closely related to the carbon isotope composition of the ocean-atmosphere carbon reservoir, and, in particular, the isotopic composition of CO(2). These studies have primarily been focused on geological intervals in which major perturbations occur in the oceanic carbon reservoir, as documented in organic carbon and carbonates phases (e.g. Permian-Triassic and Triassic-Jurassic boundary, Early Toarcian, Early Aptian, Cenomanian-Turonian boundary, Palaeocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM)). All of these events, excluding the Cenomanian-Turonian boundary, record negative carbon isotope excursions, and many authors have postulated that the cause of such excursions is the massive release of continental-margin marine gas-hydrate reservoirs (clathrates). Methane has a very negative carbon isotope composition (delta(13)C, ca. 60 per thousand ) in comparison with higher-plant and marine organic matter, and carbonate. The residence time of methane in the ocean-atmosphere reservoir is short (ca. 10 yr) and is rapidly oxidized to CO(2), causing the isotopic composition of CO(2) to become more negative from its assumed background value (delta(13)C, ca. -7 per thousand ). However, to date, only the Early Toarcian, Early Aptian and PETM are well-constrained chronometric sequences that could attribute clathrate release as a viable cause to create such rapid negative delta(13)C excursions. Notwithstanding this, the isotopic analysis of higher-plant organic matter (e.g. charcoal, wood, leaves, pollen) has the ability to (i) record the isotopic composition of palaeoatmospheric CO(2) in the geological record, (ii) correlate marine and non-marine stratigraphic successions, and (iii) confirm that oceanic carbon perturbations are not purely oceanographic in their extent and affect the entire ocean-atmosphere system. A case study from the Isle of Wight, UK, indicates that the carbon isotope composition of palaeoatmospheric CO(2) during the Mid-Cretaceous had a background value of 3 per thousand, but fluctuated rapidly to more positive (ca. +0.5 per thousand ) and negative values (ca. 10 per thousand ) during carbon cycle perturbations (e.g. carbon burial events, carbonate platform drowning, large igneous province formation). Hence, fluctuations in the carbon isotope composition of palaeoatmospheric CO(2) would compromise our use of palaeo-CO(2) proxies that are dependent on constant carbon isotope ratios of CO(2).  相似文献   

9.
Isotopomers 12CO2 and 13CO2 absorbed into polystyrene films provide narrow, sharp, and well-resolved IR absorption bands for the nu3 antisymmetric stretching mode. This is exploited to set up an inexpensive FT-IR-based method for the measurement of the carbon isotope ratio. Accuracy of 2.5 per thousand delta13C units is readily achieved already at a low resolution of 2 cm(-1).  相似文献   

10.
The relevance of both modern and fossil carbon contamination as well as isotope fractionation during preparative gas chromatography for compound-specific radiocarbon analysis (CSRA) was evaluated. Two independent laboratories investigated the influence of modern carbon contamination in the sample cleanup procedure and preparative capillary gas chromatography (pcGC) of a radiocarbon-dead 3,3',4,4',5,5'-hexachlorobiphenyl (PCB 169) reference. The isolated samples were analyzed for their 14C/12C ratio by accelerator mass spectrometry. Sample Delta14C values of -996 +/- 20 and -985 +/- 20 per thousand agreed with a Delta14C of -995 +/- 20 per thousand for the unprocessed PCB 169, suggesting that no significant contamination by nonfossil carbon was introduced during the sample preparation process at either laboratory. A reference compound containing a modern 14C/12C ratio (vanillin) was employed to evaluate process contamination from fossil C. No negative bias due to fossil C was observed (sample Delta14C value of 165 +/- 20 per thousand agreed with Delta14C of 155 +/- 12 per thousand for the unprocessed vanillin). The extent of isotopic fractionation that can be induced during pcGC was evaluated by partially collecting the vanillin model compound of modern 14C/12C abundance. A significant change in the delta13C and delta14C values was observed when only parts of the eluting peak were collected (delta13C values ranged from -15.75 to -49.91 per thousand and delta14C values from -82.4 to +4.71 per thousand). Delta14C values, which are normalized to a delta13C of -25 per thousand, did not deviate significantly (-58.9 to -5.8 per thousand, considering the uncertainty of approximately +/-20 per thousand). This means that normalization of radiocarbon results to a delta13C of -25 per thousand, normally performed to remove effects of environmental isotope fractionation on 14C-based age determinations, also cor-rects sufficiently for putative isotopic fractionation that may occur during pcGC isolation of individual compounds for CSRA.  相似文献   

11.
A continuous flow method (CF-IRMS) for the rapid determination of the sulfur isotope composition of sulfide and sulfate minerals has significant advantages over the classic extraction method in terms of the reduced sample quantity and a rapid analytical cycle of less than 8 min/ analysis. For optimum performance, the technique is sensitive to a number of operating parameters, including sample weight and the O2 saturation of the Cu-reduction reactor. Raw data are corrected using a calibration based on five international and internal standards ranging from -17.3 to +20.3 per thousand, which requires monitoring in order to correct the effect of changing delta18O of the sample gas on the measured mass 66 values. Measured sulfur contents are within 1-1.5% of expected values and the reproducibility of delta34S values is +/-0.1 per thousand (1sigma). The technique has been used successfully for more than 1000 analyses of geological samples with a wide range of delta34S from -20 to +20 per thousand.  相似文献   

12.
An IR-laser fluorination technique is reported here for analyzing the oxygen isotope composition (delta18O) of microscopic biogenic silica grains (phytoliths and diatoms). Performed after a controlled isotopic exchanged (CIE) procedure, the laser fluorination technique that allows one to visually check the success of the fluorination reaction is faster than the conventional fluorination technique and allows analyzing delta18O of small to minute samples (1.6-0.3 mg) as required for high-resolution paleoenvironmental reconstructions. The long-term reproducibility achieved with the IR laser-heating fluorination/O2 delta18O analysis is lower than or equal to +/-0.26 per thousand (1 SD; n = 99) for phytoliths and +/-0.17 per thousand (1 SD; n = 47) for diatoms. When several CIE are taken into account in the SD calculation, the resulting reproducibility is lower than or equal to +/-0.51 per thousand for phytoliths (1 SD; n = 99; CIE > 5) and +/-0.54 per thousand (1 SD; n = 47; CIE = 13) for diatoms. A minimum reproducibility of +/-0.5 per thousand leads to an estimated uncertainty on delta18Osilica close to +/-0.5 per thousand. Resulting uncertainties on reconstructed temperature and delta18Oforming water are, respectively, +/-2 degrees C and +/-0.5 per thousand and fit in the precisions required for intertropical paleoenvironmental reconstructions. Several methodological points such as optimal extraction protocols and the necessity or not of performing two CIE prior to oxygen extraction are assessed.  相似文献   

13.
Rice AL  Quay PD 《Analytical chemistry》2006,78(18):6320-6326
Little is known about the isotopic composition of formaldehyde in the atmosphere, a chemical intermediate in hydrocarbon oxidation. Here, we present a promising new method to analyze the carbon (delta 13C) and hydrogen (delta D) isotopic composition of atmospheric formaldehyde. The direct isotopic analytical technique described uses continuous-flow gas chromatography-isotope ratio mass spectrometry, which provides flexibility for either isotopic analysis without correction for derivative functional groups. Current levels of precision of measurement are +/-1.1 and +/-50 per thousand (1 sigma) for delta 13C and delta D analyses, respectively. Concentration of formaldehyde in ambient air is also determined, coincident with isotopic measurement, to a precision of +/-15%. The method has the required sensitivity for analyses of formaldehyde in urban air on relatively small volume grab samples of whole air (10-70L STP), potentially providing high temporal resolution. This is particularly advantageous for studying formaldehyde given its short lifetime and large variability in the atmosphere.  相似文献   

14.
Recent advances in gas chromatography combustion-isotope ratio mass spectrometry (GCC-IRMS) has made compound-specific isotope analysis routine, but reports on position-specific isotopic analysis are still scarce. On-line GC-pyrolysis (Py) coupled to GCC-IRMS is reported here for isolation and isotopic characterization of alaninol and phenethylamine, analogues of alanine and phenylalanine, respectively. Ideally, pyrolytic fragments will originate from unique sites within the parent molecule, and isotope ratios for each position within the parent can either be measured directly or calculated from fragment isotope ratios without substantially degrading the analytical precision. Alaninol pyrolysis yielded several fragments, of which CO and CH4 were used for isotope ratio calculations. Isotope labeling experiments showed that CO derived entirely from the C(1) position, while all three positions of alaninol contributed to CH4 (29.0 +/- 0.3% from C(1), 3.6 +/- 0.2% from C(2), and 66.9 +/- 1.1% from C(3)). We demonstrate iterative use of mass balance to calculate isotope ratios from all positions despite the nonideal positional fidelity of CH4. Pyrolysis of phenethylamine generated benzene and toluene fragments. Benzene derived entirely from C(ring), and toluene was proportionately formed from C(3) and C(ring). Relative intramolecular isotope ratios (Deltadelta13C) were calculated directly from delta13C of fragments or indirectly by mass balance. Though the C(3) isotope ratio was calculated from the benzene and toluene fragments, propagation of errors showed that the final precision of the determination was degraded due to the small contribution that C(3) makes to toluene. Samples of each amino acid from four different vendors showed natural variability between sources, especially at the C(1) position of alaninol (range of Deltadelta13C approximately 50 per thousand). The average precision was SD(Deltadelta13C) < 0.20 per thousand for directly measured positions of alaninol and phenethylamine. The precision of indirectly measured positions was poorer (SD(Deltadelta13C) = 0.94 per thousand for alaninol, 6.54 per thousand for phenethylamine) due to propagation of errors. These data demonstrate that GC-Py-GCC-IRMS data can be used to extract high-precision isotope ratios from amino acids despite nonideal positional fidelity in fragments and that natural intramolecular variability in delta13C can be used to distinguish different sources of amino acids.  相似文献   

15.
A new methodology for bromine stable isotope determination by continuous-flow isotope ratio mass spectrometry (CF-IRMS) was developed. The technique was tested on inorganic samples. Inorganic bromide was precipitated in the form of silver bromide by using silver nitrate in a standard methodology. Bromine stable isotope analysis was carried out on methyl bromide (CH3Br) after converting silver bromide to methyl bromide by reacting it with methyl iodide (CH3I). The system used in this study is an IsoPrime IRMS, with analytical capabilities of both dual-inlet and continuous-flow modes coupled with an Agilent 6890 GC equipped with a CTC Analytics CombiPAL autosampler. This new technique measures samples as small as 0.2 mg of AgBr (1 micromol of Br-). The bromine stable isotope analysis using continuous flow technology showed excellent precision and accuracy. The internal precision using pure methyl bromide gas is better than +/-0.03 per thousand (+/-SD); the external precision using seawater standard is better than +/-0.06 per thousand (+/-SD) for n = 12. Moreover, the sample analysis time is 16 min, as compared to 75 min needed in previous techniques. This allows for 50 samples to be analyzed in 1 day, as compared to 8 samples using the conventional techniques. A series of natural saline formation waters and brines from sedimentary and crystalline rock environments was measured by this new methodology to test the potential natural range of delta81Br. The bromine isotopic composition of the samples ranged from 0.00 to +1.80 per thousand relative to standard mean ocean bromide (SMOB). Initial trends and distinctive isotopic difference were noticed between crystalline shield brines and sedimentary formation brines.  相似文献   

16.
Few studies have used the stable isotopic composition of O(2) as a tracer of gas transport or biogeochemical processes in environmental research. Here we demonstrate field sampling techniques for gaseous and dissolved O(2) and describe an analytical method for measuring δ(18)O and δ(17)O values of O(2) in air, soil gas, and water samples using continuous-flow isotope-ratio mass spectrometry (CF-IRMS). A Micromass CF-IRMS was altered to accommodate a sample gas injection port prior to a CO(2) and H(2)O trap and GC column. The GC column was a 1-m, 5-? molecular sieve column held at 35 °C. The resolved sample O(2) was introduced to the IRMS via an open split. δ(18)O and δ(17)O values were determined by measurement of O(2) isotopes at m/z 34/32 and 33/32 and comparison to a reference pulse of O(2). Repeated injections of atmospheric oxygen yielded a repeatability (±SD) of ±0.17‰ for δ(18)O and ±0.5‰ for δ(17)O. IRMS source linearity was excellent for O(2) over a sample size range of 60-400 μL. The smallest sample for routine δ(18)O and δ(17)O determinations was ~80 μL of O(2), with a sample analysis time of 180 s. Preliminary results from a riverine and soil gas study illustrate natural oxygen isotope fractionation processes.  相似文献   

17.
Conditions and systems for on-line combustion of effluents from capillary gas chromatographic columns and for removal of water vapor from product streams were tested. Organic carbon in gas chromatographic peaks 15 s wide and containing up to 30 nanomoles of carbon was quantitatively converted to CO2 by tubular combustion reactors, 200 x 0.5 mm, packed with CuO or NiO. No auxiliary source of O2 was required because oxygen was supplied by metal oxides. Spontaneous degradation of CuO limited the life of CuO reactors at T > 850 degrees C. Since NiO does not spontaneously degrade, its use might be favored, but Ni-bound carbon phases form and lead to inaccurate isotopic results at T < 1050 degrees C if gas-phase O2 is not added. For all compounds tested except CH4, equivalent isotopic results are provided by CuO at 850 degrees C, NiO + O2 (gas-phase mole fraction, 10(-3)) at 1050 degrees C and NiO at 1150 degrees C. The combustion interface did not contribute additional analytical uncertainty, thus observed standard deviations of 13C/12C ratios were within a factor of 2 of shot-noise limits. For combustion and isotopic analyses of CH4, in which quantitative combustion required T approximately 950 degrees C, NiO-based systems are preferred, and precision is approximately 2 times lower than that observed for other analytes. Water must be removed from the gas stream transmitted to the mass spectrometer or else protonation of CO2 will lead to inaccuracy in isotopic analyses. Although thresholds for this effect vary between mass spectrometers, differential permeation of H2O through Nafion tubing was effective in both cases tested, but the required length of the Nafion membrane was 4 times greater for the more sensitive mass spectrometer.  相似文献   

18.
The isotopic composition of water in hydrated minerals, such as gypsum and jarosite, has numerous applications in studies of recent climate change, ore formation, and soil development. However, oxygen and hydrogen isotope analysis of water of crystallization is currently a complex procedure. Commonly used techniques involve offline extraction of water from hydrated minerals and subsequent isotope analysis. Such methods are time-consuming, require relatively large sample sizes, and the stepwise procedure has to be carried out with extreme caution to avoid erroneous results. We present a novel online method for the oxygen and hydrogen isotope analysis of water of crystallization in hydrous minerals. Gypsum (CaSO 4.2H 2O) samples, 2 mg in size, are reacted in a simply modified carbon reducing furnace connected to a continuous-flow mass spectrometer system. Analysis time is less than 10 min/sample. The precision (2 std dev mean) of our method for 2-mg gypsum (30 mumol of H 2O) samples is 0.3 per thousand for oxygen and less than 1.4 per thousand for hydrogen isotope measurements. For oxygen isotope analysis alone, samples as small as 0.2 mg of gypsum can be analyzed with a precision of 0.3 per thousand.  相似文献   

19.
The stability over time (repeatability) for the determination of site-specific 13C/12C ratios at natural abundance by quantitative 13C NMR spectroscopy has been tested on three probes: enriched bilabeled [1,2-13C2]ethanol; ethanol at natural abundance; and vanillin at natural abundance. It is shown in all three cases that the standard deviation for a series of measurements taken every 2-3 months over periods between 9 and 13 months is equal to or smaller than the standard deviation calculated from 5-10 replicate measurements made on a single sample. The precision which can be achieved using the present analytical 13C NMR protocol is higher than the prerequisite value of 1-2 per thousand for the determination of site-specific 13C/12C ratios at natural abundance (13C-SNIF-NMR). Hence, this technique permits the discrimination of very small variations in 13C/12C ratios between carbon positions, as found in biogenic natural products. This observed stability over time in 13C NMR spectroscopy indicates that further improvements in precision will depend primarily on improved signal-to-noise ratio.  相似文献   

20.
Yu YX  Wen S  Feng YL  Bi XH  Wang XM  Peng PA  Sheng GY  Fu JM 《Analytical chemistry》2006,78(4):1206-1211
A novel method has been developed for the compound-specific carbon isotope analysis of atmospheric formaldehyde using gas chromatography/combustion/isotope ratio mass spectrometry (GC/C/IRMS). The method allows the determination of the delta13C value for atmospheric formaldehyde at nanogram levels with higher precision and lower detection limit. In the present work, atmospheric formaldehyde was collected using NaHSO3-coated Sep-Pak silica gel cartridges, washed out by water, then derivatized by cysteamine of known delta13C value, and the delta13C value of its derivative (thiazolidine) determined by GC/C/IRMS. Finally, the delta13C value of atmospheric formaldehyde could be calculated by a simple mass balance equation between formaldehyde, cysteamine, and thiazolidine. Using three formaldehydes with different delta13C values, calibration experiments were carried out over large ranges of formaldehyde concentrations. The carbon isotope analysis method achieved excellent reproducibility and high accuracy. There was no carbon isotopic fractionation throughout the derivatization processes. The differences in the carbon isotopic compositions of thiazolidine between the measured and predicted values were always <0.5 per thousand, within the specifications of the GC/C/IRMS system. The present method was also compared with the previous 2,4-dinitrophenylhydrazine derivatization method, and this method could be performed with lower analytical error and detection limit. Using this method, four 6-h ambient atmospheric formaldehyde samples were consecutively collected from 8 to 9 March 2005. The results showed that the delta13C values of atmospheric formaldehyde were different during the daytime and nighttime. This method proved suitable for the routine operation and may provide additional insight on sources and sinks of atmospheric formaldehyde.  相似文献   

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