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On-Line High-Precision Stable Hydrogen Isotopic Analyses on Nanoliter Water Samples
246
Citations
16
References
2001
Year
Hydrogen Energy TechnologyEngineeringStable HydrogenOxygen IsotopeComputational ChemistryChemistryEarth ScienceChemical EngineeringEnvironmental ChemistryEnvironmental GeochemistryEnvironmental Analytical ChemistryHydrogen IsotopesAnalytical ChemistryIsotope AnalysisNanoliter Water SamplesWater QualityCr Reactor TemperatureHydrogenQuantum ChemistryWater AnalysisHydrogen TransitionNatural SciencesIsotope GeochemistryMass SpectrometryStable Isotope ProbingGeochemistry
We describe a new on-line chromium reduction technique for the measurement of stable hydrogen (deltaD) isotopes in waters using continuous-flow isotope ratio mass spectrometry. The on-line Cr reduction method has low intersample memory effects (< 1%) and excellent precision and accuracy for deltaD (+/-0.5% and was used to analyze waters samples as small as 50 nL. The on-line Cr method has a number of significant advantages over conventional offline Zn and U reduction and on-line carbon-based pyrolysis techniques. A single Cr reactor can be used to analyze approximately 1,000 water samples using an injection volume of 0.5 microL, with an individual sample analysis time of 4 min. Intersample memory effects are negligible. The Cr reactor temperature of 1050 degree C is easily attainable on standard elemental analyzers and so does not require the specialized and costly high-temperature furnaces of carbon-based pyrolysis reactors. Furthermore, hydrogen isotopes in extremely small water samples in the 100-nL range or less can be easily measured; hence, this new method opens up a number of exciting application areas in earth and environmental sciences, for example, natural abundance deltaD measurements of individual fluid inclusions in geologic materials using a laser source and measurements of body fluids in physiological and metabolic research.
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