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Conquering the Outdoors with On-site Mass Spectrometry
Author(s) -
Lars Mächler,
Matthias S. Brennwald,
Lina Tyroller,
David M. Livingstone,
Rolf Kipfer
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
chimia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.387
H-Index - 55
eISSN - 2673-2424
pISSN - 0009-4293
DOI - 10.2533/chimia.2014.155
Subject(s) - groundwater , noble gas , mass spectrometry , inlet , chemistry , aqueous solution , groundwater recharge , environmental science , environmental chemistry , analytical chemistry (journal) , aquifer , chromatography , geology , geotechnical engineering , organic chemistry , geomorphology
In recent years, mass spectrometers with a membrane inlet separating gases from water for final analysis have been used successfully for the on-site quantification of dissolved gases in surface waters. In 'classical' membrane inlet mass spectrometers (MIMS), the membrane directly separates the water from the high-vacuum environment of the mass spectrometer. The gas equilibrium MIMS (GE-MIMS) that is described in this review, however, makes use of an intermediate pressure reduction stage after the membrane inlet. Hence, the gas concentrations after the membrane are at steady state, near solubility equilibrium with the water to be analyzed. This setup has several advantages over classical MIMS, which enable autonomous and continuous in-field operation. The GE-MIMS can be used to acquire noble gas concentration time series (NGTS). Noble gases are useful tracers for physical gas exchange and transport in groundwater and other aqueous systems. Hence NGTS enable the temporal dynamics of physical gas exchange and transport in groundwater and other aqueous systems to be investigated. To determine the O2 turnover that has occurred in groundwater since recharge, both the O2 concentration in situ and the total input of O2 to the groundwater since recharge is needed. Determination of the latter is only possible if the relevant physical exchange and transport mechanisms can be quantified. In particular, gas exchange between soil air and groundwater often significantly affects groundwater O2 concentrations. Determination of O2 turnover in groundwater therefore requires a combined analysis of O2 and noble gas concentrations.

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