| Literature DB >> 21154650 |
Abstract
Cryogenic or heating methods have been widely used in experiments involving gas purification or isolation and in studying phase changes among solids, liquids, or gases for more than a century. Thermal gradients are often present in these routine processes. While stable isotopes of an element are known to fractionate under a thermal gradient, the largely diffusion-driven fractionation is assumed to be entirely mass-dependent. We report here, however, that distinct non-mass-dependent oxygen isotope fractionation can be generated when subjecting rarefied O(2) gas in a closed system to a simple thermal gradient. The Δ(17) O value, a measure of the (17) O anomaly, can be up to -0.51‰ (standard deviation (s.d.) 1σ = 0.03) in one of the temperature compartments. The magnitude of the (17) O anomalies decreased with increasing initial gas pressures. The authenticity of this phenomenon is substantiated by a series of blank tests and isotope mass-balance calculations. The observed anomalies are not the result of H(2) O contamination in samples or in isotope ratio mass spectrometry. Our finding calls attention to the importance of thermal gradient-induced isotope fractionation and to its implications in laboratory procedures, stable isotope geochemistry, and the physical chemistry of rarefied gases.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21154650 DOI: 10.1002/rcm.4825
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Rapid Commun Mass Spectrom ISSN: 0951-4198 Impact factor: 2.419