Literature DB >> 11918180

Achieving high time-resolution with a new flow-through type analyzer for total inorganic carbon in seawater.

Hideshi Kimoto1, Ken Nozaki, Setsuko Kudo, Ken Kato, Akira Negishi, Hajime Kayanne.   

Abstract

A fully automated, continuous-flow-through type analyzer was developed to observe rapid changes in the concentration of total inorganic carbon (CT) in coastal zones. Seawater and an H3PO4 solution were fed into the analyzer's mixing coil by two high-precision valveless piston pumps. The CO2 was stripped from the seawater and moved into a carrier gas, using a newly developed continuous-flow-through CO2 extractor. A mass flow controller was used to assure a precise flow rate of the carrier gas. The CO2 concentration was then determined with a nondispersive infrared gas analyzer. This analyzer achieved a time-resolution of as good as 1 min. In field experiments on a shallow reef flat of Shiraho (Ishigaki Island, Southwest Japan), the analyzer detected short-term, yet extreme, variations in CT which manual sampling missed. Analytical values obtained by the analyzer on the boat were compared with those determined by potentiometric titration with a closed cell in a laboratory: CT(flow-through) = 0.980 x CT(titration) + 38.8 with r2 = 0.995 (n = 34; September 1998).

Entities:  

Year:  2002        PMID: 11918180     DOI: 10.2116/analsci.18.247

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Anal Sci        ISSN: 0910-6340            Impact factor:   2.081


  1 in total

1.  Net uptake of atmospheric CO2 by coastal submerged aquatic vegetation.

Authors:  Tatsuki Tokoro; Shinya Hosokawa; Eiichi Miyoshi; Kazufumi Tada; Kenta Watanabe; Shigeru Montani; Hajime Kayanne; Tomohiro Kuwae
Journal:  Glob Chang Biol       Date:  2014-03-13       Impact factor: 10.863

  1 in total

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