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Spatial Microanalysis of Natural 13C/12C Abundance in Environmental Samples Using Laser Ablation-Isotope Ratio Mass Spectrometry
Author(s) -
Andrei Rodionov,
Eva Lehndorff,
Ciprian Stremtan,
Willi A. Brand,
Heinz-Peter Königshoven,
Wulf Amelung
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
analytical chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.117
H-Index - 332
eISSN - 1520-6882
pISSN - 0003-2700
DOI - 10.1021/acs.analchem.9b00892
Subject(s) - chemistry , isotope ratio mass spectrometry , natural abundance , isotope , mass spectrometry , isotope analysis , isotopes of carbon , analytical chemistry (journal) , microanalysis , soil water , isotopic signature , fractionation , stable isotope ratio , laser ablation , soil test , isotope fractionation , carbon fibers , abundance (ecology) , environmental chemistry , total organic carbon , laser , environmental science , geology , soil science , chromatography , ecology , oceanography , optics , biology , quantum mechanics , physics , organic chemistry , materials science , composite number , composite material
The stable 13 C/ 12 C isotope composition usually varies among different organic materials due to isotope fractionation during biochemical synthesis and degradation processes. Here, we introduce a novel laser ablation-isotope ratio mass spectrometry (LA-IRMS) methodology that allows highly resolved spatial analysis of carbon isotope signatures in solid samples down to a spatial resolution of 10 μm. The presented instrumental setup includes in-house-designed exchangeable ablation cells (3.8 and 0.4 mL, respectively) and an improved sample gas transfer, which allow accurate δ 13 C measurements of an acryl plate standard down to 0.6 and 0.4 ng of ablated carbon, respectively (standard deviation 0.25‰). Initial testing on plant and soil samples confirmed that microheterogeneity of their natural 13 C/ 12 C abundance can now be mapped at a spatial resolution down to 10 μm. The respective δ 13 C values in soils with C3/C4 crop sequence history varied by up to 14‰ across a distance of less than 100 μm in soil aggregates, while being partly sorted along rhizosphere gradients of <300 μm from Miscanthus plant roots into the surrounding soil. These very first demonstrations point to the appearance of very small metabolic hotspots originating from different natural isotope discrimination processes, now traceable via LA-IRMS.

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