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Automated analyses of 18 O/ 16 O ratios in dissolved oxygen from 12‐mL water samples
Author(s) -
Barth Johannes A.C.,
Tait Andrew,
Bolshaw Mike
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
limnology and oceanography: methods
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.898
H-Index - 72
ISSN - 1541-5856
DOI - 10.4319/lom.2004.2.35
Subject(s) - analytical chemistry (journal) , chemistry , aqueous solution , isotope ratio mass spectrometry , oxygen , oxygen 18 , chromatography , mass spectrometry , isotopes of oxygen , nuclear chemistry , organic chemistry
We introduce a new technique to routinely determine the 18 O/ 16 O ratio of O 2 (aq) from 12‐mL Exetainer® vials. Results were expressed in a δ‐notation versus air and the Vienna Standard Mean Ocean Water (VSMOW). Samples were prepared by creating a He‐headspace and stripping O 2 (aq) from solution by shaking for 30 min on a wrist shaker. Subsequent isotope analysis of the extracted O 2 (g) was achieved by converting the entire headspace into a large sampling loop using a double‐hole needle. This enabled admission of sufficient O 2 (g) into a packed A5‐Å‐molecular sieve column, where it was separated from N 2 before admission to the isotope ratio mass spectrometer. The latter was tuned to an m/z ratio of 32, thus enabling direct determination of molecular O 2 (g) without conversion to CO 2 . External standards consisted of dry air samples in helium‐flushed vials and had between 1.5 and 16.8 parts per thousand O 2 (g) in a He matrix and a known isotopic composition of 0‰ air (+23.8‰ VSMOW). The method allows automated analyses of up to ~180 samples in one single batch and will provide new quantitative information about oxygen turnover in aqueous systems, including rates of gas transfer, redox processes, respiration, and photosynthesis. Repeat δ 18 O O2(aq) measurements on samples with concentrations between 15.6 µmol L −1 and saturation revealed standard deviations of 0.3‰. This is a typical precision encountered in continuous flow applications, and the method is available for studies using either 18 O‐labeled water to evaluate O 2 gross production by incubation experiments or for natural abundance studies when isotope shifts are larger than 0.8‰. It may also become useful in microbiological and medical applications and can serve to quantify plant‐gas exchange and soil gas processes.