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1.
Bottled water is a food product that considerably depends on the environment from which it originates, not only at the place where it is produced, but predominantly on the conditions in the recharge area of the wells captured for bottling. According to their source and the bottling process, bottled waters can be divided into natural and artificially sparkling waters, still and flavoured waters. These waters originate from various parts of the hydrological cycle and their natural origin is reflected in their hydrogen and oxygen stable isotopic compositions (delta(2)H and delta(18)O). A total of 58 domestic and foreign brands and 16 replicates of bottled waters, randomly collected on the Slovene market in September 2004, were analysed for delta(2)H and delta(18)O. The isotopic composition varied between -83 per thousand and -46 per thousand with an average of -66 per thousand for hydrogen, and between -11.9 per thousand and -7.5 per thousand with an average of -9.6 per thousand for oxygen. This investigation helped (1) to determine and test the classification of bottled waters, (2) to determine the natural origin of bottled water, and (3) to indicate differences between the natural and production processes. The production process may influence the isotopic composition of flavoured waters and artificially sparkling waters. No such modification was observed for still and natural sparkling waters. The methods applied, together with hydrological knowledge, can be used for the authentication of bottled waters for regulatory and consumer control applications.  相似文献   

2.
Techniques have been developed to allow on-line simultaneous analysis of concentration and stable isotopic compositions ((13)C and (18)O) of dissolved carbon monoxide (CO) in natural water, using continuous-flow isotope ratio mass spectrometry (CF-IRMS). The analytical system consisted sequentially of a He-sparging bottle of water, a gas dryer, CO(2)-trapping stage using both Ascarite trap and silica-gel packed gas chromatography (GC), on-line oxidation to CO(2) using the Schütze reagent, cryofocusing, GC purification using a capillary column and measurement by CF-IRMS. Each sample analysis takes about 40 minutes. The detection limit with delta(13)C standard deviation of 0.5 per thousand is 300 pmol and that with delta(18)O deviation of 1.0 per thousand is 750 pmol. Analytical blanks associated with these methods are 21+/-9 pmol. The procedures are evaluated through analyses of temporally varying concentration and isotopic compositions of CO in an artificial lake on the university campus. The delta(13)C and delta(18)O values of CO showed wide variation in accordance with diurnal variation of CO concentration, probably due to significant isotopic effects during photochemical production and microbial oxidation of CO in the aquatic environment. The delta(13)C and delta(18)O values of CO should be a useful tool in studies of the mechanism and pathways of CO production and consumption in natural waters.  相似文献   

3.
Continuous-flow isotope ratio mass spectrometry (CF-IRMS) was used to compare (2)H isotopic composition at natural abundance level of human scalp hair and fingernail samples collected from subjects worldwide with interpolated delta(2)H precipitation values at corresponding locations. The results showed a strong correlation between delta(2)H values of meteoric water and hair (r(2) = 0.86), while the corresponding correlation for nails was not as strong (r(2) = 0.6). Offsets of -180 per thousand and -127 per thousand were observed when calculating solutions of the linear regression analyses for delta(2)H vs. delta(18)O correlation plots of hair and nail samples, respectively. Compared with the +10 per thousand offset of the global meteoric water line equation these findings suggested that delta(18)O data from hair and nail would be of limited diagnostic value. The results of this pilot study provide for the first time tentative correlations of (2)H isotopic composition of human hair and nails with local water. Linear regression analyses for measured delta(2)H values of human hair and nails vs. water yielded delta(2)H(hair) = 0.49 x delta(2)H(water) - 35 and delta(2)H(nails) = 0.38 x delta(2)H(water) - 49, respectively. The results suggest that (2)H isotopic analysis of hair and nail samples can be used to provide information regarding an individual's recent geographical life history and, hence, location. The benefit of this technique is to aid identification of victims of violent crime and mass disasters in circumstances where traditional methods such as DNA and fingerprinting cannot be brought to bear (or at least not immediately).  相似文献   

4.
This paper presents a modified H(2)O-CO(2) equilibration method for stable oxygen isotopic composition (delta(18)O) analysis of water. This method enables rapid and simple delta(18)O analysis of milligram quantities of water, by employing solid reagent NaHCO(3) as the CO(2) source, a small (0.6 mL) glass vial for the equilibration chamber, and an isotope-monitoring gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (irm-GC/MS) system for delta 18O(CO2) analysis. This method has several advantages, including simple handling for the H(2)O-CO(2) equilibration (without purging and/or evacuation treatments), rapid and easy delta(18)O analysis of equilibrated CO(2), and highly sensitive and highly precise delta(18)O analysis of H(2)O, using samples as small as 10 mg and with a precision of less than +/-0.12 per thousand. The time needed to attain oxygen isotopic equilibration between CO(2) and water is also comparable (17 h for 10 mg H(2)O and 10 h for 100 mg H(2)O) to other previous methods using CO(2) gas for the CO(2) source. The extent of delta(18)O variation of sample water from its initial delta(18)O value due to isotope exchange with added NaHCO(3) is also discussed. It is concluded that the correction needed is negligible (less than 0.1 per thousand ) as long as the oxygen atom ratio (O(NaHCO3)/O(H2O)) is less than 3.3 +/- 10(-3) and provided the delta18O(H2O) determination is made by comparing delta(18)O of CO(2) equilibrated with sample water and that equilibrated with standard water of a moderately close delta(18)O value, less than 30 per thousand difference.  相似文献   

5.
Despite a rapidly growing literature on analytical methods and field applications of O isotope-ratio measurements of NO(3)(-) in environmental studies, there is evidence that the reported data may not be comparable because reference materials with widely varying delta(18)O values have not been readily available. To address this problem, we prepared large quantities of two nitrate salts with contrasting O isotopic compositions for distribution as reference materials for O isotope-ratio measurements: USGS34 (KNO(3)) with low delta(18)O and USGS35 (NaNO(3)) with high delta(18)O and 'mass-independent' delta(17)O. The procedure used to produce USGS34 involved equilibration of HNO(3) with (18)O-depleted meteoric water. Nitric acid equilibration is proposed as a simple method for producing laboratory NO(3)(-) reference materials with a range of delta(18)O values and normal (mass-dependent) (18)O:(17)O:(16)O variation. Preliminary data indicate that the equilibrium O isotope-fractionation factor (alpha) between [NO(3)(-)] and H(2)O decreases with increasing temperature from 1.0215 at 22 degrees C to 1.0131 at 100 degrees C. USGS35 was purified from the nitrate ore deposits of the Atacama Desert in Chile and has a high (17)O:(18)O ratio owing to its atmospheric origin. These new reference materials, combined with previously distributed NO(3) (-) isotopic reference materials IAEA-N3 (=IAEA-NO-3) and USGS32, can be used to calibrate local laboratory reference materials for determining offset values, scale factors, and mass-independent effects on N and O isotope-ratio measurements in a wide variety of environmental NO(3)(-) samples. Preliminary analyses yield the following results (normalized with respect to VSMOW and SLAP, with reproducibilities of +/-0.2-0.3 per thousand, 1sigma): IAEA-N3 has delta(18)O = +25.6 per thousand and delta(17)O = +13.2 per thousand; USGS32 has delta(18)O = +25.7 per thousand; USGS34 has delta(18)O = -27.9 per thousand and delta(17)O = -14.8 per thousand; and USGS35 has delta(18)O = +57.5 per thousand and delta(17)O = +51.5 per thousand.  相似文献   

6.
We determined grain-scale heterogeneities (from 6 to 88 microg) in the stable carbon and oxygen isotopic compositions (delta(13)C and delta(18)O) of the international standard calcite materials (NBS 19, NBS 18, IAEA-CO-1, and IAEA-CO-8) using a continuous-flow isotope ratio mass spectrometry (CF-IRMS) system that realizes a simultaneous determination of the delta(13)C and the delta(18)O values with standard deviations (S.D.) of less than 0.05 per thousand for CO(2) gas. Based on the S.D. of the delta(13)C and delta(18)O values determined for CO(2) gases evolved from the different grains of the same calcite material, we found that NBS 19, IAEA-CO-1, and IEAE-CO-8 were homogeneous for delta(13)C (less than 0.10 per thousand S.D.), and that only NBS 19 was homogeneous for delta(18)O (less than 0.14 per thousand S.D.). On the level of single grains, we found that both IAEA-CO-1 and IAEA-CO-8 were heterogeneous for delta(18)O (1.46 per thousand and 0.76 per thousand S.D., respectively), and that NBS 18 was heterogeneous for both delta(13)C and delta(18)O (0.34 per thousand and 0.54 per thousand S.D., respectively). Closer inspection of NBS 18 grains revealed that the highly deviated isotopic compositions were limited to the colored grains. By excluding such colored grains, we could also obtain the homogeneous delta(13)C and delta(18)O values (less than 0.18 per thousand and less than 0.16 per thousand S.D., respectively) for NBS 18. We conclude that NBS 19, IAEA-CO-1, or pure grains in NBS 18 are suitable to be used as the standard reference material for delta(13)C, and that either NBS 19 or pure grains in NBS 18 are suitable to be used as the reference material for delta(18)O during the grain-scale isotopic analyses of calcite.  相似文献   

7.
We describe a modified version of the equilibration method and a correction algorithm for isotope ratio measurements of small quantities of water samples. The deltaD and the delta(18)O of the same water sample can both be analyzed using an automated equilibrator with sample sizes as small as 50 microL. Conventional equilibration techniques generally require water samples of several microL. That limitation is attributable mainly to changes in the isotope ratio ((18)O/(16)O or D/H) of water samples during isotopic exchange between the equilibration gas (CO(2) or H(2)) and water, and therefore the technique for microL quantities of water requires mass-balance correction using the water/gas (CO(2) or H(2)) mole ratio to correct this isotopic effect. We quantitatively evaluate factors controlling the variability of the isotopic effect due to sample size. Theoretical consideration shows that a simple linear equation corrects for the effects without determining parameters such as isotope fractionation factors and water/gas mole ratios. Precisions (1-sigma) of 50-microL meteoric water samples whose isotopic compositions of -1.4 to -396.2 per thousand for deltaD are +/-0.5 to +/-0.6 per thousand, and of -0.37 to -51.37 per thousand for delta(18)O are +/-0.01 to +/-0.11 per thousand.  相似文献   

8.
A new continuous-flow system for the analysis of the complete stable isotopic composition of water vapor has been developed. The sample size is reduced to only 120 microg (identical with 120 nL of liquid substance) of water, yielding precisions of about 0.7, 1.3 and 7 per thousand for delta17O, delta18O and delta2H, respectively. The total time for the analysis of a sample is about 150 min including purging times. Oxidized steel surfaces can be a source of memory effects which can be corrected for. The system is predestined for atmospheric applications in the tropopause region, as the sample can be directly introduced into the system from a cryogenic trap.  相似文献   

9.
Coprecipitation of nitrate and sulfate by barium has probably resulted in significant error in numerous studies dealing with the oxygen isotopic composition of natural sulfates using chemical/thermal conversion of BaSO(4) and analysis by isotope ratio mass spectrometry. In solutions where NO(3) (-)/SO(4) (2-) molar ratios are above 2 the amount of nitrate coprecipitated with BaSO(4) reaches a maximum of approximately 7% and decreases roughly linearly as the molar ratio decreases. The fraction of coprecipitated nitrate appears to increase with decreasing pH and is also affected by the nature of the cations in the precipitating solution. The size of the oxygen isotope artifact in sulfate depends both on the amount of coprecipitated nitrate and the delta(18)O and Delta(17)O values of the nitrate, both of which can be highly variable. The oxygen isotopic composition of sulfate extracted from atmospheric aerosols or rain waters are probably severely biased because photochemical nitrate is usually also present and it is highly enriched in (18)O (delta(18)O approximately 50-90 per thousand) and has a large mass-independent isotopic composition (Delta(17)O approximately 20-32 per thousand). The sulfate delta(18)O error can be 2-5 per thousand with Delta(17)O artifacts reaching as high as 4.0 per thousand. Copyright (c) 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

10.
Relationships between recent migration and hair delta(18)O values were examined for 40 people living in a rural community in SW England. The isotopic contents of 35 'local' hair samples were compared with those of 5 recently arrived individuals (from Australia, Canada, Chile, Germany and the USA). The hair delta(18)O values of these 'visitors' were +7.9 (Omaha, USA), +11.2 (Jena, Germany), +12.1 (Osorno, Chile), +12.6 (Montreal, Canada) and +14.3 per thousand (Adelaide, Australia). The hair value for the USA visitor (+7.9 per thousand) fell outside the range for the 33 local adult residents, +10.5 to +14.3 per thousand (+12.7 +/- 0.8 per thousand). Hair delta(18)O values did not identify the individuals from Adelaide, Montreal and Osorno as 'visitors', but hair delta(13)C or delta(34)S data did. Combining the hair delta(18)O, delta(13)C and delta(34)S values using principal components analysis (two components explained 89% of the overall variation among the 40 subjects) helped to more clearly distinguish European from non-European individuals, indicating the existence of global overall isotope (geo-origin) relationships.  相似文献   

11.
A simple modification to a commercially available gas chromatograph isotope ratio mass spectrometer (GC/IRMS) allows rapid and precise determination of the stable isotopes ((13)C and (18)O) of CO(2) at ambient CO(2) concentrations. A sample loop was inserted downstream of the GC injection port and used to introduce small volumes of air samples into the GC/IRMS. This procedure does not require a cryofocusing step and significantly reduces the analysis time. The precisions for delta(13)C and delta(18)O of CO(2) at ambient concentration were +/-0.164 and +/-0.247 per thousand, respectively. This modified GC/IRMS was used to test the effects of storage on the (18)O and (13)C isotopic ratios of CO(2) at ambient concentrations in four container types. On average, the change in the (13)C-CO(2) and (18)O-CO(2) ratios of samples after one week of storage in glass vials equipped with butyl rubber stoppers (Bellco Glass Inc.) were depleted by 0.12 and by 0.20 per thousand, respectively. The (13)C ratios in aluminum canisters (Scotty II and IV, Scott Specialty Gasses) after one month of storage were depleted, on average, by 0.73 and 2.04 per thousand, respectively, while the (18)O ratios were depleted by 0.38 and 1.20 per thousand for the Scotty II and IV, respectively. After a month of storage in electropolished containers (Summa canisters, Biospheric Research Corporation), the (13)C-CO(2) and (18)O-CO(2) ratios were depleted, on average, by 0.26 and enriched by 0.30 per thousand, respectively, close to the precision of measurements. Samples were collected at a mature hardwood forest for CO(2) concentration determination and isotopic analysis. A comparison of CO(2) concentrations determined with an infrared gas analyzer and from sample voltages, determined on the GC/IRMS concurrent with the isotopic analysis, indicated that CO(2) concentrations can be determined reliably with the GC/IRMS technique. The (13)C and (18)O ratios of nighttime ecosystem-respired CO(2), determined from the intercept of Keeling plots, were -26.11 per thousand (V-PDB) and -8.81 per thousand (V-PDB-CO(2)), respectively.  相似文献   

12.
Nitrous oxide (N2O), a greenhouse gas, is mainly emitted from soils during the nitrification and denitrification processes. N2O stable isotope investigations can help to characterize the N2O sources and N2O production mechanisms. N2O isotope measurements have been conducted for different types of global terrestrial ecosystems. However, no isotopic data of N2O emitted from Antarctic tundra ecosystems have been reported although the coastal ice-free tundra around Antarctic continent is the largest sea animal colony on the global scale. Here, we report for the first time stable isotope composition of N2O emitted from Antarctic sea animal colonies (including penguin, seal and skua colonies) and normal tundra soils using in situ field observations and laboratory incubations, and we have analyzed the effects of sea animal excrement depositions on stable isotope natural abundance of N2O. For all the field sites, the soil-emitted N2O was 15N- and 18O-depleted compared with N2O in local ambient air. The mean delta values of the soil-emitted N2O were delta15N = -13.5 +/- 3.2 per thousand and delta18O = 26.2 +/- 1.4 per thousand for the penguin colony, delta15N = -11.5 +/- 5.1 per thousand and delta18O = 26.4 +/- 3.5 per thousand for the skua colony and delta15N = -18.9 +/- 0.7 per thousand and delta18O = 28.8 +/- 1.3 per thousand for the seal colony. In the soil incubations, the isotopic composition of N2O was measured under N2 and under ambient air conditions. The soils incubated under the ambient air emitted very little N2O (2.93 microg N2O--N kg(-1)). Under N2 conditions, much more N2O was formed (9.74 microg N2O--N kg(-1)), and the mean delta15N and delta18O values of N2O were -19.1 +/- 8.0 per thousand and 21.3 +/- 4.3 per thousand, respectively, from penguin colony soils, and -17.0 +/- 4.2 per thousand and 20.6 +/- 3.5 per thousand, respectively, from seal colony soils. The data from in situ field observations and laboratory experiments point to denitrification as the predominant N2O source from Antarctic sea animal colonies.  相似文献   

13.
The bacterial denitrification method for isotopic analysis of nitrate using N(2)O generated from Pseudomonas aureofaciens may overestimate delta(15)N values by as much as 1-2 per thousand for samples containing atmospheric nitrate because of mass-independent (17)O variations in such samples. By analyzing such samples for delta(15)N and delta(18)O using the denitrifier Pseudomonas chlororaphis, one obtains nearly correct delta(15)N values because oxygen in N(2)O generated by P. chlororaphis is primarily derived from H(2)O. The difference between the apparent delta(15)N value determined with P. aureofaciens and that determined with P. chlororaphis, assuming mass-dependent oxygen isotopic fractionation, reflects the amount of mass-independent (17)O in a nitrate sample. By interspersing nitrate isotopic reference materials having substantially different delta(18)O values with samples, one can normalize oxygen isotope ratios and determine the fractions of oxygen in N(2)O derived from the nitrate and from water with each denitrifier. This information can be used to improve delta(15)N values of nitrates having excess (17)O. The same analyses also yield estimates of the magnitude of (17)O excess in the nitrate (expressed as Delta(17)O) that may be useful in some environmental studies. The 1-sigma uncertainties of delta(15)N, delta(18)O and Delta(17)O measurements are +/-0.2, +/-0.3 and +/-5 per thousand, respectively.  相似文献   

14.
A quantitative method for cryogenically sampling atmospheric water vapor on the temporal scale of 10 to 15 min in the field or laboratory is described. The sample apparatus is lightweight, affordable, and easy to assemble. The method allows for H2O:CO2 equilibration within the same sampling tubes and hence increases turnaround time for delta18O analysis. Quantitative analysis in the laboratory showed recovery of a vaporized, known, 18O water standard to 0.2 per thousand precision.  相似文献   

15.
A high-precision, and rapid on-line method for oxygen isotope analysis of silver phosphate is presented. The technique uses high-temperature elemental analyzer (EA)-pyrolysis interfaced in continuous flow (CF) mode to an isotopic ratio mass spectrometer (IRMS). Calibration curves were generated by synthesizing silver phosphate with a 13 per thousand spread in delta(18)O values. Calibration materials were obtained by reacting dissolved potassium dihydrogen phosphate (KH(2)PO(4)) with water samples of various oxygen isotope compositions at 373 K. Validity of the method was tested by comparing the on-line results with those obtained by classical off-line sample preparation and dual inlet isotope measurement. In addition, silver phosphate precipitates were prepared from a collection of biogenic apatites with known delta(18)O values ranging from 12.8 to 29.9 per thousand (V-SMOW). Reproducibility of +/- 0.2 per thousand was obtained by the EA-Py-CF-IRMS method for sample sizes in the range 400-500 microg. Both natural and synthetic samples are remarkably well correlated with conventional (18)O/(16)O determinations. Silver phosphate is a very stable material and easy to degas and, thus, could be considered as a good candidate to become a reference material for the determination of (18)O/(16)O ratios of phosphate by high-temperature pyrolysis.  相似文献   

16.
The determination of delta18O values in CO2 at a precision level of +/-0.02 per thousand (delta-notation) has always been a challenging, if not impossible, analytical task. Here, we demonstrate that beyond the usually assumed major cause of uncertainty - water contamination - there are other, hitherto underestimated sources of contamination and processes which can alter the oxygen isotope composition of CO2. Active surfaces in the preparation line with which CO2 comes into contact, as well as traces of air in the sample, can alter the apparent delta18O value both temporarily and permanently. We investigated the effects of different surface materials including electropolished stainless steel, Duran glass, gold and quartz, the latter both untreated and silanized. CO2 frozen with liquid nitrogen showed a transient alteration of the 18O/16O ratio on all surfaces tested. The time to recover from the alteration as well as the size of the alteration varied with surface type. Quartz that had been ultrasonically cleaned for several hours with high purity water (0.05 microS) exhibited the smallest effect on the measured oxygen isotopic composition of CO2 before and after freezing. However, quartz proved to be mechanically unstable with time when subjected to repeated large temperature changes during operation. After several days of operation the gas released from the freezing step contained progressively increasing trace amounts of O2 probably originating from inclusions within the quartz, which precludes the use of quartz for cryogenically trapping CO2. Stainless steel or gold proved to be suitable materials after proper pre-treatment. To ensure a high trapping efficiency of CO2 from a flow of gas, a cold trap design was chosen comprising a thin wall 1/4" outer tube and a 1/8" inner tube, made respectively from electropolished stainless steel and gold. Due to a considerable 18O specific isotope effect during the release of CO2 from the cold surface, the thawing time had to be as long as 20 min for high precision delta18O measurements. The presence of traces of air in almost all CO2 gases that we analyzed was another major source of error. Nitrogen and oxygen in the ion source of our mass spectrometer (MAT 252, Finnigan MAT, Bremen, Germany) give rise to the production of NO2 at the hot tungsten filament. NO2+ is isobaric with C16O18O+ (m/z 46) and interferes with the delta18O measurement. Trace amounts of air are present in CO2 extracted cryogenically from air at -196 degrees C. This air, trapped at the cold surface, cannot be pumped away quantitatively. The amount of air present depends on the surface structure and, hence, the alteration of the measured delta18O value varies with the surface conditions. For automated high precision measurement of the isotopic composition of CO2 of air samples stored in glass flasks an extraction interface ('BGC-AirTrap') was developed which allows 18 analyses (including standards) per day to be made. For our reference CO2-in-air, stored in high pressure cylinders, the long term (>9 months) single sample precision was 0.012 per thousand for delta13C and 0.019 per thousand for delta18O.  相似文献   

17.
We developed a rapid, sensitive, and automated analytical system to determine the delta15N, delta18O, and Delta17O values of nitrous oxide (N2O) simultaneously in nanomolar quantities for a single batch of samples by continuous-flow isotope-ratio mass spectrometry (CF-IRMS) without any cumbersome and time-consuming pretreatments. The analytical system consisted of a vacuum line to extract and purify N2O, a gas chromatograph for further purification of N2O, an optional thermal furnace to decompose N2O to O2, and a CF-IRMS system. We also used pneumatic valves and pneumatic actuators in the system so that we could operate it automatically with timing software on a personal computer. The analytical precision was better than 0.12 per thousand for delta15N with >4 nmol N2O injections, 0.25 per thousand for delta18O with >4 nmol N2O injections, and 0.20 per thousand for Delta17O with >20 nmol N2O injections for a single measurement. We were also easily able to improve the precision (standard errors) to better than 0.05 per thousand for delta15N, 0.10 per thousand for delta18O, and 0.10 per thousand for Delta17O through multiple analyses with more than four repetitions with 190 nmol samples using the automated analytical system. Using the system, the delta15N, delta18O, and Delta17O values of N2O can be quantified not only for atmospheric samples, but also for other gas or liquid samples with low N2O content, such as soil gas or natural water. Here, we showed the first ever Delta17O measurements of soil N2O.  相似文献   

18.
The structural proteins that comprise approximately 90% of animal hair have the potential to record environmentally and physiologically determined variation in delta2H and delta18O values of body water. Broad, systematic, geospatial variation in stable hydrogen and oxygen isotopes of environmental water and the capacity for rapid, precise measurement via methods such as high-temperature conversion elemental analyzer/isotope ratio mass spectrometry (TC/EA-IRMS) make these isotope systems particularly well suited for applications requiring the geolocation of hair samples. In order for such applications to be successful, however, methods must exist for the accurate determination of hair delta2H and delta18O values reflecting the primary products of biosynthesis. Here, we present the results of experiments designed to examine two potential inaccuracies affecting delta2H and delta18O measurements of hair: the contribution of non-biologic hydrogen and oxygen to samples in the form of sorbed molecular water, and the exchange of hydroxyl-bound hydrogen between hair keratin and ambient water vapor. We show that rapid sorption of molecular water from the atmosphere can have a substantial effect on measured delta2H and delta18O values of hair (comprising approximately 7.7% of the measured isotopic signal for H and up to approximately 10.6% for O), but that this contribution can be effectively removed through vacuum-drying of samples for 6 days. Hydrogen exchange between hair keratin and ambient vapor is also rapid (reaching equilibrium within 3-4 days), with 9-16% of the total hydrogen available for exchange at room temperature. Based on the results of these experiments, we outline a recommended sample treatment procedure for routine measurement of delta2H and delta18O in mammal hair.  相似文献   

19.
We have developed an analytical system to determine stable isotopic compositions (delta13C and delta18O) of sub-microgram quantities of CaCO3 for the purpose of analyzing individual foraminiferal shells, using continuous-flow isotope ratio mass spectrometry (CF-IRMS). The system consists of a micro-volume CaCO3 decomposition tube, stainless steel CO2 purification vacuum line with a quantity-regulating unit, helium-purged CO2 purification line, gas chromatograph, and a CF-IRMS system. By using this system, we can determine stable carbon and oxygen isotopic compositions as low as 0.2 microg of CaCO3, with standard deviations of +/-0.10 per thousand for delta13C and +/-0.18 per thousand for delta18O within a 4-h reaction time and 30-min analysis period.  相似文献   

20.
Analytical grade L-glutamic acid is chemically stable and has a C/N mole ratio of 5, which is close to that of many of natural biological materials, such as blood and animal tissue. Two L-glutamic acid reference materials with substantially different 13C and 15N abundances have been prepared for use as organic reference materials for C and N isotopic measurements. USGS40 is analytical grade L-glutamic acid and has a delta13C value of -26.24 per thousand relative to VPDB and a delta15N value of -4.52 per thousand relative to N2 in air. USGS41 was prepared by dissolving analytical grade L-glutamic acid with L-glutamic acid enriched in 13C and 15N. USGS41 has a delta13C value of +37.76 per thousand and a delta15N value of +47.57 per thousand. The delta13C and delta15N values of both materials were measured against the international reference materials NBS 19 calcium carbonate (delta13C=+1.95 per thousand ), L-SVEC lithium carbonate (delta13C=-46.48 per thousand ), IAEA-N-1 ammonium sulfate (delta15N=0.43 per thousand ), and USGS32 potassium nitrate (delta15N=180 per thousand ) by on-line combustion continuous-flow and off-line dual-inlet isotope-ratio mass spectrometry. Both USGS40 and USGS41 are isotopically homogeneous; reproducibility of delta13C is better than 0.13 per thousand, and that of delta15N is better than 0.13 per thousand in 100-microg amounts. These two isotopic reference materials can be used for (i) calibrating local laboratory reference materials, and (ii) quantifying drift with time, mass-dependent fractionations, and isotope-ratio-scale contraction in the isotopic analysis of various biological materials. Isotopic results presented in this paper yield a delta13C value for NBS 22 oil of -29.91 per thousand, in contrast to the commonly accepted value of -29.78 per thousand for which off-line blank corrections probably have not been quantified satisfactorily.  相似文献   

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