首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
Carbon isotope analyses (δ13C) of some New Zealand Manuka honeys show that they often fail the internationally recognised Association of Official Analytical Chemists sugar test (AOAC method 998.12) which detects added C4 sugar, although these honeys are from unadulterated sources. Failure of these high value products is detrimental to the New Zealand honey industry, not only in lost export revenue, but also in brand and market reputation damage. The standard AOAC test compares the carbon isotope value of the whole honey and corresponding protein isolated from the same honey. Differences between whole honey and protein δ13C values should not be greater than +1.0‰, as it indicates the possibility of adulteration with syrups or sugars from C4 plants such as high fructose corn syrup or cane sugar. We have determined that during the standard AOAC method, pollen and other insoluble components are isolated with the flocculated protein. These non‐protein components have isotope values which are considerably different from those of the pure protein, and can shift the apparent δ13C value of protein further away from the δ13C value of the whole honey, giving a false positive result for added C4 sugar. To eliminate a false positive C4 sugar test for Manuka honey, prior removal of pollen and other insoluble material from the honey is necessary to ensure that only the pure protein is isolated. This will enable a true comparison between whole honey and protein δ13C isotopes. Furthermore, we strongly suggest this modification to the AOAC method be universally adopted for all honey C4 sugar tests. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

2.
Amino sugars in soils have been used as markers of microbial necromass and to determine the relative contribution of bacterial and fungal residues to soil organic matter. However, little is known about the dynamics of amino sugars in soil. This is partly because of a lack of adequate techniques to determine ‘turnover rates’ of amino sugars in soil. We conducted an incubation experiment where 13C‐labeled organic substrates of different quality were added to a sandy soil. The objectives were to evaluate the applicability of compound‐specific stable isotope analysis via gas chromatography‐combustion‐isotope ratio mass spectrometry (GC‐C‐IRMS) for the determination of 13C amino sugars and to demonstrate amino sugar dynamics in soil. We found total analytical errors between 0.8 and 2.6‰ for the δ13C‐values of the soil amino sugars as a result of the required δ13C‐corrections for isotopic alterations due to derivatization, isotopic fractionation and analytical conditions. Furthermore, the δ13C‐values of internal standards in samples determined via GC‐C‐IRMS deviated considerably from the δ13C‐values of the pure compounds determined via elemental analyzer IRMS (with a variation of 9 to 10‰ between the first and third quartile among all samples). This questions the applicability of GC‐C‐IRMS for soil amino sugar analysis. Liquid chromatography‐combustion‐IRMS (LC‐C‐IRMS) might be a promising alternative since derivatization, one of the main sources of error when using GC‐C‐IRMS, is eliminated from the procedure. The high 13C‐enrichment of the substrate allowed for the detection of very high 13C‐labels in soil amino sugars after 1 week of incubation, while no significant differences in amino sugar concentrations over time and across treatments were observed. This suggests steady‐state conditions upon substrate addition, i.e. amino sugar formation equalled amino sugar decomposition. Furthermore, higher quality substrates seemed to favor the production of fungal‐derived amino sugars. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

3.
Carbon isotope analysis by bulk elemental analysis coupled with isotope ratio mass spectrometry has been the mainstay of δ13C analyses both at natural abundance and in tracer studies. More recently, compound‐specific isotope analysis (CSIA) has become established, whereby organic constituents are separated online by gas or liquid chromatography before oxidation and analysis of CO2 for constituent δ13C. Theoretically, there should be concordance between bulk δ13C measurements and carbon‐weighted δ13C measurements of carbon‐containing constituents. To test the concordance between the bulk and CSIA, fish oil was chosen because the majority of carbon in fish oil is in the triacylglycerol form and ~95% of this carbon is amenable to CSIA in the form of fatty acids. Bulk isotope analysis was carried out on aliquots of oil extracted from 55 fish samples and δ13C values were obtained. Free fatty acids (FFAs) were produced from the oil samples by saponification and derivatised to fatty acid methyl esters (FAMEs) for CSIA by gas chromatography/combustion/isotope ratio mass spectrometry. A known amount of an internal standard (C15:0 FAME) was added to allow analyte quantitation. This internal standard was also isotopically calibrated in both its FFA (δ13C = ?34.30‰) and FAME (δ13C = ?34.94‰) form. This allowed reporting of FFA δ13C from measured FAME δ13C values. The bulk δ13C was reconstructed from CSIA data based on each FFA δ13C and the relative amount of CO2 produced by each analyte. The measured bulk mean δ13C (SD) was ?23.75‰ (1.57‰) compared with the reconstructed bulk mean δ13C of ?23.76 (1.44‰) from CSIA and was not significantly different. Further analysis of the data by the Bland‐Altman method did not show particular bias in the data relative to the magnitude of the measurement. Good agreement between the methods was observed with the mean difference between methods (range) of 0.01‰ (?1.50 to 1.30). Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

4.
The natural 13C/12C isotope composition (δ13C) of plants and organic compounds within plant organs is a powerful tool to understand carbon allocation patterns and the regulation of photosynthetic or respiratory metabolism. However, many enzymatic fractionations are currently unknown, thus impeding our understanding of carbon trafficking pathways within plant cells. One of them is the 12C/13C isotope effect associated with invertases (EC 3.2.1.26) that are cornerstone enzymes for Suc metabolism and translocation in plants. Another conundrum of isotopic plant biology is the need to measure accurately the specific δ13C of individual carbohydrates. Here, we examined two complementary methods for measuring the δ13C value of sucrose, glucose and fructose, that is, off‐line high‐performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) purification followed by elemental analysis and isotope ratio mass spectrometry (EA‐IRMS) analysis, and gas chromatography‐combustion (GC‐C)‐IRMS. We also used these methods to determine the in vitro 12C/13C isotope effect associated with the yeast invertase. Our results show that, although providing more variable values than HPLC~EA‐IRMS, and being sensitive to derivatization conditions, the GC‐C‐IRMS method gives reliable results. When applied to the invertase reaction, both methods indicate that the 12C/13C isotope effect is rather small and it is not affected by the use of heavy water (D2O). Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

5.
N‐Demethylation of tropine is an important step in the degradation of this compound and related metabolites. With the purpose of understanding the reaction mechanism(s) involved, it is desirable to measure the 15N kinetic isotope effects (KIEs), which can be accessed through the 15N isotope shift (Δδ15N) during the reaction. To measure the isotope fractionation in 15N during tropine degradation necessitates the extraction of the residual substrate from dilute aqueous solution without introducing artefactual isotope fractionation. Three protocols have been compared for the extraction and measurement of the 15N/14N ratio of tropine from aqueous medium, involving liquid‐liquid phase partitioning or silica‐C18 solid‐phase extraction. Quantification was by gas chromatography (GC) on the recovered organic phase and δ15N values were obtained by isotope ratio measurement mass spectrometry (irm‐MS). Although all the protocols used can provide satisfactory data and both irm‐EA‐MS and irm‐GC‐MS can be used to obtain the δ15N values, the most convenient method is liquid‐liquid extraction from a reduced aqueous volume combined with irm‐GC‐MS. The protocols are applied to the measurement of 15N isotope shifts during growth of a Pseudomonas strain that uses tropane alkaloids as sole source of carbon and nitrogen. The accuracy of the determination of the 15N/14N ratio is sufficient to be used for the determination of 15N‐KIEs. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

6.
Gas chromatography‐combustion‐isotope ratio mass spectrometry (GC‐C‐IRMS) is increasingly applied to food and metabolic studies for stable isotope analysis (δ13C), with the quantification of analyte concentration often obtained via a second alternative method. We describe a rapid direct transesterification of triacylglycerides (TAGs) for fatty acid methyl ester (FAME) analysis by GC‐C‐IRMS demonstrating robust simultaneous quantification of amount of analyte (mean r2 = 0.99, accuracy ±2% for 37 FAMEs) and δ13C (±0.13‰) in a single analytical run. The maximum FAME yield and optimal δ13C values are obtained by derivatizing with 10% (v/v) acetyl chloride in methanol for 1 h, while lower levels of acetyl chloride and shorter reaction times skewed the δ13C values by as much as 0.80‰. A Bland‐Altman evaluation of the GC‐C‐IRMS measurements resulted in excellent agreement for pure oils (±0.08‰) and oils extracted from French fries (±0.49‰), demonstrating reliable simultaneous quantification of FAME concentration and δ13C values. Thus, we conclude that for studies requiring both the quantification of analyte and δ13C data, such as authentication or metabolic flux studies, GC‐C‐IRMS can be used as the sole analytical method. Copyright © 2011 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

7.
Hydrogen (δ2H) and oxygen (δ18O) stable isotope analysis is useful when tracing the origin of water in beverages, but traditional analytical techniques are limited to pure or extracted waters. We measured the isotopic composition of extracted beverage water using both isotope ratio infrared spectroscopy (IRIS; specifically, wavelength‐scanned cavity ring‐down spectroscopy) and isotope ratio mass spectrometry (IRMS). We also analyzed beer, sodas, juices, and milk ‘as is’ using IRIS. For IRIS analysis, four sequential injections of each sample were measured and data were corrected for sample‐to‐sample memory using injections (a) 1‐4, (b) 2‐4, and (c) 3‐4. The variation between δ2H and δ18O values calculated using the three correction methods was larger for unextracted (i.e., complex) beverages than for waters. The memory correction was smallest when using injections 3‐4. Beverage water δ2H and δ18O values generally fit the Global Meteoric Water Line, with the exception of water from fruit juices. The beverage water stable isotope ratios measured using IRIS agreed well with the IRMS data and fit 1:1 lines, with the exception of sodas and juices (δ2H values) and beers (δ18O values). The δ2H and δ18O values of waters extracted from beer, soda, juice, and milk were correlated with complex beverage δ2H and δ18O values (r = 0.998 and 0.997, respectively) and generally fit 1:1 lines. We conclude that it is possible to analyze complex beverages, without water extraction, using IRIS although caution is needed when analyzing beverages containing sugars, which can clog the syringe and increase memory, or alcohol, a known spectral interference. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

8.
Accurate determinations of stable isotope ratios require a calibration using at least two reference materials with different isotopic compositions to anchor the isotopic scale and compensate for differences in machine slope. Ideally, the δ values of these reference materials should bracket the isotopic range of samples with unknown δ values. While the practice of analyzing two isotopically distinct reference materials is common for water (VSMOW‐SLAP) and carbonates (NBS 19 and L‐SVEC), the lack of widely available organic reference materials with distinct isotopic composition has hindered the practice when analyzing organic materials by elemental analysis/isotope ratio mass spectrometry (EA‐IRMS). At present only L‐glutamic acids USGS40 and USGS41 satisfy these requirements for δ13C and δ15N, with the limitation that L‐glutamic acid is not suitable for analysis by gas chromatography (GC). We describe the development and quality testing of (i) four nicotine laboratory reference materials for on‐line (i.e. continuous flow) hydrogen reductive gas chromatography‐isotope ratio mass‐spectrometry (GC‐IRMS), (ii) five nicotines for oxidative C, N gas chromatography‐combustion‐isotope ratio mass‐spectrometry (GC‐C‐IRMS, or GC‐IRMS), and (iii) also three acetanilide and three urea reference materials for on‐line oxidative EA‐IRMS for C and N. Isotopic off‐line calibration against international stable isotope measurement standards at Indiana University adhered to the ‘principle of identical treatment’. The new reference materials cover the following isotopic ranges: δ2Hnicotine ?162 to ?45‰, δ13Cnicotine ?30.05 to +7.72‰, δ15Nnicotine ?6.03 to +33.62‰; δ15Nacetanilide +1.18 to +40.57‰; δ13Curea ?34.13 to +11.71‰, δ15Nurea +0.26 to +40.61‰ (recommended δ values refer to calibration with NBS 19, L‐SVEC, IAEA‐N‐1, and IAEA‐N‐2). Nicotines fill a gap as the first organic nitrogen stable isotope reference materials for GC‐IRMS that are available with different δ15N values. Comparative δ13C and δ15N on‐line EA‐IRMS data from 14 volunteering laboratories document the usefulness and reliability of acetanilides and ureas as EA‐IRMS reference materials. Published in 2009 by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

9.
Glycolipids are prominent constituents in the membranes of cells from all domains of life. For example, diglycosyl‐glycerol dibiphytanyl glycerol tetraethers (2Gly‐GDGTs) are associated with methanotrophic ANME‐1 archaea and heterotrophic benthic archaea, two archaeal groups of global biogeochemical importance. The hydrophobic biphytane moieties of 2Gly‐GDGTs from these two uncultivated archaeal groups exhibit distinct carbon isotopic compositions. To explore whether the isotopic compositions of the sugar headgroups provide additional information on the metabolism of their producers, we developed a procedure to analyze the δ13C values of glycosidic headgroups. Successful determination was achieved by (1) monitoring the contamination from free sugars during lipid extraction and preparation, (2) optimizing the hydrolytic conditions for glycolipids, and (3) derivatizing the resulting sugars into aldononitrile acetate derivatives, which are stable enough to withstand a subsequent column purification step. First results of δ13C values of sugars cleaved from 2Gly‐GDGTs in two marine sediment samples, one containing predominantly ANME‐1 archaea and the other benthic archaea, were obtained and compared with the δ13C values of the corresponding biphytanes. In both samples the dominant sugar headgroups were enriched in 13C relative to the corresponding major biphytane. This 13C enrichment was significantly larger in the putative major glycolipids from ANME‐1 archaea (~15‰) than in those from benthic archaea (<7‰). This method opens a new analytical window for the examination of carbon isotopic relationships between sugars and lipids in uncultivated organisms. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

10.
Amino sugars have been used as biomarkers to assess the relative contribution of dead microbial biomass of different functional groups of microorganisms to soil carbon pools. However, little is known about the dynamics of these compounds in soil. The isotopic composition of individual amino sugars can be used as a tool to determine the turnover of these compounds. Methods to determine the δ13C of amino sugars using gas chromatography/combustion/isotope ratio mass spectrometry (GC/C/IRMS) have been proposed in literature. However, due to derivatization, the uncertainty on the obtained δ13C is too high to be used for natural abundance studies. Therefore, a new high‐performance liquid chromatography/isotope ratio mass spectrometry (HPLC/IRMS) methodology, with increased accuracy and precision, has been developed. The repeatability on the obtained δ13C values when pure amino sugars were analyzed were not significantly concentration‐dependent as long as the injected amount was higher than 1.5 nmol. The δ13C value of the same amino sugar spiked to a soil deviated by only 0.3‰ from the theoretical value. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

11.
Gaseous membrane permeation (MP) technologies have been combined with continuous‐flow isotope ratio mass spectrometry for on‐line δ13C measurements. The experimental setup of membrane permeation‐gas chromatography/combustion/isotope ratio mass spectrometry (MP‐GC/C/IRMS) quantitatively traps gas streams in membrane permeation experiments under steady‐state conditions and performs on‐line gas transfer into a GC/C/IRMS system. A commercial polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) membrane sheet was used for the experiments. Laboratory tests using CO2 demonstrate that the whole process does not fractionate the C isotopes of CO2. Moreover, the δ13C values of CO2 permeated on‐line give the same isotopic results as off‐line static dual‐inlet IRMS δ13C measurements. Formaldehyde generated from aqueous formaldehyde solutions has also been used as the feed gas for permeation experiments and on‐line δ13C determination. The feed‐formaldehyde δ13C value was pre‐determined by sampling the headspace of the thermostated aqueous formaldehyde solution. Comparison of the results obtained by headspace with those from direct aqueous formaldehyde injection confirms that the headspace sampling does not generate isotopic fractionation, but the permeated formaldehyde analyzed on‐line yields a 13C enrichment relative to the feed δ13C value, the isotopic fractionation being 1.0026 ± 0.0003. The δ13C values have been normalized using an adapted two‐point isotopic calibration for δ13C values ranging from ?42 to ?10‰. The MP‐GC/C/IRMS system allows the δ13C determination of formaldehyde without chemical derivatization or additional analytical imprecision. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

12.
A Delta Plus XL continuous flow gas chromatography/high‐temperature conversion‐isotope ratio mass spectrometer system (GC‐TC‐IRMS) with a liquid nitrogen trap installed at the end of the micropyrolysis oven was used to measure hydrogen isotope (δ2H) values of 1,2‐dichloroethane (1,2‐DCA). The 1,2‐DCA δ2H values were within uncertainty of the δ2H value for the same 1,2‐DCA analyzed using off‐line sample preparation and conventional dual inlet mass spectrometry, verifying that this system can accurately measure 1,2‐DCA δ2H values. After 71 reproducible and accurate 1,2‐DCA δ2H measurements had been obtained, the standard deviation on the mean of the cumulative 1,2‐DCA δ2H measurements was greater than ±5‰. The cumulative load of chlorine at this point was ~5.5 × 10?6 moles, which may be the limit to the quantity of chlorine that can be input before the reproducibility of 1,2‐DCA δ2H measurements is compromised. This study is the first to our knowledge to demonstrate a method for obtaining accurate and reproducible compound‐specific δ2H values for chlorinated hydrocarbons at dissolved concentrations typical of field conditions. Paired δ2H and δ13C values suggest that dual parameter isotopic measurements can distinguish between different contaminant sources, as well as providing additional constraints on degradation pathways and contaminant remediation. Copyright © 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

13.
Although gas chromatography–pyrolysis–isotope ratio mass spectrometry (GC‐Py‐IRMS) has allowed us to make online compound‐specific δ18O measurements for about the last ten years, this technique has hardly been applied. We tested different pyrolysis reactor designs using standards (vanillin, ethylvanillin, a fatty acid methyl ester and alkanes) in order to optimize the GC‐Py‐IRMS δ18O measurements. The method was then applied to methylboronic acid (MBA) sugar derivatives (pentoses, 6‐deoxyhexoses and hexoses). Plant‐ and microbial‐derived monosaccharides were extracted hydrolytically from litter and topsoils before derivatization. The measured δ18O values of samples and co‐analyzed reference material were first drift‐corrected by use of regularly discharged pulses of CO reference gas. Secondly, they were corrected for the amount dependence of the δ18O values. Thirdly, the δ18O values were calibrated using the reference material (principle of ‘Identical Treatment’), and, finally, a correction was applied by taking the hydrolytically introduced and water‐exchangeable oxygen atoms into account. Our results suggest that the δ18O values of plant‐derived monosaccharides in litter reflect the climatic conditions of the last year, whereas δ18O values of the respective topsoils reflect the averaged climate signal of the last decades or even centuries. This demonstrates the high potential of the method for palaeoclimate reconstructions. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

14.
The chemical signals in the sequential layers of fish otoliths have the potential to provide fisheries biologists with temporal and spatial details of migration which are difficult to obtain without expensive tracking methods. Signal resolution depends, however, on the extraction technique used. We compared the use of mechanical micromilling and continuous flow isotope ratio mass spectrometry (CF‐IRMS) methods with secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS) to obtain δ18O profiles from otoliths of wild Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) and used these to corroborate the time of freshwater emigration of the juvenile with macroscopic patterns within the otolith. Both techniques showed the transition occurring at the same visible feature on the otolith, allowing future analyses to easily identify the juvenile (freshwater) versus adult (marine) life‐stages. However, SIMS showed a rapid and abrupt transition whereas micromilling provided a less distinct signal. The number of samples that could be obtained per unit area sampled using SIMS was 2 to 3 times greater than that when using micromilling/CF‐IRMS although the δ18O values and analytical precisions (~0.2‰) of the two methods were comparable. In addition, SIMS δ18O results were used to compare otolith aragonite values with predicted values calculated using various isotope fractionation equations. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

15.
Stable oxygen isotope compositions (δ18O values) of two commercial and one synthesized silver orthophosphate reagents have been determined on the VSMOW scale. The analyses were carried out in three different laboratories: lab (1) applying off‐line oxygen extraction in the form of CO2 which was analyzed on a dual inlet and triple collector isotope ratio mass spectrometer, while labs (2) and (3) employed an isotope ratio mass spectrometer coupled to a high‐temperature conversion/elemental analyzer (TC/EA) where Ag3PO4 samples were analyzed as CO in continuous flow mode. The δ18O values for the proposed new comparison materials were linked to the generally accepted δ18O values for Vennemann's TU‐1 and TU‐2 standards as well as for Ag3PO4 extracted from NBS120c. The weighted average δ18OVSMOW values for the new comparison materials UMCS‐1, UMCS‐2 and AGPO‐SCRI were determined to be + 32.60 (± 0.12), + 19.40 (± 0.12) and + 14.58 (± 0.13)‰, respectively. Copyright © 2011 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

16.
The stable carbon isotope compositions of tetrols, erythritol and threitol were determined by gas chromatography/combustion/isotope ratio mass spectrometry (GC/C/IRMS). Using four tetrols with various δ13C values derivatized by methylboronic acid, the carbon isotope analysis method achieved excellent reproducibility and high accuracy. There was no carbon isotopic fractionation during the derivatization processes. The differences in the carbon isotopic compositions of methylboronates between the measured and calculated ranged from ?0.20 to 0.12‰, within the specification of the GC/C/IRMS system. It was demonstrated that δ13C values of tetrols could be calculated by a simple mass balance equation between tetrols, methylboronic acid, and methylboronates. The analogous 2‐methyltetrols, marker compounds of photooxidation products of atmospheric isoprene, should have similar behavior using the same derivatization reagent. This method may provide insight on sources and sinks of atmospheric isoprene. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

17.

Rationale

The fundamental level of stable isotopic knowledge lies at specific atomic positions within molecules but existing methods of analysis require lengthy off‐line preparation to reveal this information. An automated position‐specific isotope analysis (PSIA) method is presented to determine the stable carbon isotopic compositions of the carboxyl groups of amino acids (δ13CCARBOXYL values). This automation makes PSIA measurements easier and routine.

Methods

An existing high‐performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) gas handling interface/stable isotope ratio mass spectrometry system was modified by the addition of a post‐column derivatisation unit between the HPLC system and the interface. The post‐column reaction was optimised to yield CO2 from the carboxyl groups of amino acids by reaction with ninhydrin.

Results

The methodology described produced δ13CCARBOXYL values with typical standard deviations below ±0.1 ‰ and consistent differences (Δ13CCARBOXYL values) between amino acids over a 1‐year period. First estimates are presented for the δ13CCARBOXYL values of a number of internationally available amino acid reference materials.

Conclusions

The PSIA methodology described provides a further dimension to the stable isotopic characterisation of amino acids at a more detailed level than the bulk or averaged whole‐molecule level. When combined with on‐line chromatographic separation or off‐line fraction collection of protein hydrolysates the technique will offer an automated and routine way to study position‐specific carboxyl carbon isotope information for amino acids, enabling more refined isotopic studies of carbon uptake and metabolism.
  相似文献   

18.
An online method using continuous flow isotope ratio mass spectrometry (CF‐IRMS) interfaced with a Gasbench II device was established to analyze carbon and oxygen isotopic compositions and to estimate the content of minor amounts of carbonate in silicate rocks. The mixtures of standard materials and high‐purity quartz are firstly used to calibrate different quantities of carbonate in silicates. The results suggest that the accuracy and precision of the online analysis are both better than those obtained using an offline method. There is a positive correlation between the carbonate weight and the Mass44 ion beam intensity (or peak area). When the weight of carbonate in the mixtures is greater than 70 µg (equal to ~1800 mV Mass44 ion beam intensity), the δ13C and δ18O values of samples usually have accuracy and precision of ±0.1‰ and ±0.2‰ (1σ), respectively. If the weight is less than 70 µg, some limitations (e.g., not perfectly linear) are encountered that significantly reduce the accuracy and precision. The measured δ18O values are systematically lower than the true values by ?0.3 to ?0.7‰; the lower the carbonate content, the lower the measured δ18O value. For samples with lower carbonate content, the required phosphoric acid doses are higher and more oxygen isotope exchanges with the water in the phosphoric acid. To guarantee accurate results with high precision, multiple analyses of in‐house standards and an artificial MERCK sample with δ13C values from ?35.58 to 1.61‰ and δ18O from 6.04 to 18.96‰ were analyzed simultaneously with the unknown sample. This enables correction of the measured raw data for the natural sample based on multiple‐point normalization. The results indicate that the method can be successfully applied to a range of natural rocks. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

19.
Revised δ34S reference values with associated expanded uncertainties (95% confidence interval (C.I.)) are presented for the sulfur isotope reference materials IAEA‐S‐2 (22.62 ± 0.16‰) and IAEA‐S‐3 (−32.49 ± 0.16‰). These revised values are determined using two relative‐difference measurement techniques, gas source isotope ratio mass spectrometry (GIRMS) and double‐spike multi‐collector thermal ionization mass spectrometry (MC‐TIMS). Gas analyses have traditionally been considered the most robust for relative isotopic difference measurements of sulfur. The double‐spike MC‐TIMS technique provides an independent method for value‐assignment validation and produces revised values that are both unbiased and more precise than previous value assignments. Unbiased δ34S values are required to anchor the positive and negative end members of the sulfur delta (δ) scale because they are the basis for reporting both δ34S values and the derived mass‐independent Δ33S and Δ36S values. Published in 2009 by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

20.
We report a novel method for the chromatographic separation and measurement of stable carbon isotope ratios (δ13C) of individual amino acids in hair proteins and bone collagen using the LC‐IsoLink system, which interfaces liquid chromatography (LC) with isotope ratio mass spectrometry (IRMS). This paper provides baseline separation of 15 and 13 of the 18 amino acids in bone collagen and hair proteins, respectively. We also describe an approach to analysing small hair samples for compound‐specific analysis of segmental hair sections. The LC/IRMS method is applied in a historical context by the δ13C analysis of hair proteins and bone collagen recovered from six individuals from Uummannaq in Greenland. The analysis of hair and bone amino acids from the same individual, compared for the first time in this study, is of importance in palaeodietary reconstruction. If hair proteins can be used as a proxy for bone collagen at the amino acid level, this validates compound‐specific isotope studies using hair as a model for palaeodietary reconstruction. Our results suggest that a small offset observed in the bulk δ13C values of the hair and bone samples may be attributed to two factors: (i) amino acid compositional differences between hair and bone proteins, and (ii) differential turnover rates of the tissues and the amino acid pools contributing to their synthesis. This application proposes that hair may be a useful complementary or alternative source of compound‐specific paleodietary information. Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号