6533b7d7fe1ef96bd1268efe

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Triple Isotope Fractionation Exponents of Elements Measured by MC-ICP-MS—An Example of Mg

Michael J. HenehanJochen VoglMichael TatzelThomas TütkenMartin Rosner

subject

IsotopeStable isotope ratioMc icp msChemistry010401 analytical chemistryAnalytical chemistry010402 general chemistry01 natural sciencesChemical reaction0104 chemical sciencesAnalytical ChemistryIsotope fractionationMagnesium Isotopes Fractionation MC-ICP-MSPhysics::Atomic PhysicsNuclear Experiment

description

In most chemical reactions, stable isotopes are fractionated in a mass-dependent manner, yielding correlated isotope ratios in elements with three or more stable isotopes. The proportionality between isotope ratios is set by the triple isotope fractionation exponent θ that can be determined precisely for, e.g., sulfur and oxygen by IRMS, but not for metal(loid) elements due to the lower precision of MC-ICP-MS analysis and smaller isotopic variations. Here, using Mg as a test case, we compute a complete metrologically robust uncertainty budget for apparent θ values and, with reference to this, present a new measurement approach that reduces uncertainty on θ values by 30%. This approach, namely, direct educt-product bracketing (sample–sample bracketing), allows apparent θ values of metal(loid) isotopes to be determined precisely enough to distinguish slopes in three-isotope space. For the example of Mg, we assess appropriate quality control standards for interference-to-signal ratios and report apparent θ values of carbonate–seawater pairs. We determined apparent θ values for marine biogenic carbonates, where the foraminifera Globorotalia menardii yields 0.514 ± 0.005 (2 SD), the coral Porites, 0.515 ± 0.006 (2 SD), and two specimens of the giant clam Tridacna gigas, 0.508 ± 0.007 (2 SD) and 0.509 ± 0.006 (2 SD), documenting differences in the uptake pathway of Mg among marine calcifiers. The capability to measure apparent θ values more precisely adds a new dimension to metal(loid) δ values, with the potential to allow us to resolve different modes of fractionation in industrial and natural processes.

https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.analchem.9b02699