M Alexandra Weigand1, Julien Foriel1,2, Bruce Barnett1,3, Sergey Oleynik1, Daniel M Sigman1. 1. Department of Geosciences, Princeton University, Guyot Hall, Princeton, NJ, 08544, USA. 2. Earth-Life Science Institute, Tokyo Institute of Technology, 2-12-1-1E-1 Ookayayama Meguro-ku, Tokyo, 152-8550, Japan. 3. W. M. Keck Paleoenvironmental and Environmental Stable Isotope Laboratory, University of Kansas, 2030 Becker Drive, Lawrence, KS, 66047, USA.
Abstract
RATIONALE: The denitrifier method allows for highly sensitive measurement of the (15) N/(14) N (δ(15) N value) and (18) O/(16) O (δ(18) O value) of nitrate dissolved in natural waters and for highly sensitive δ(15) N measurement of other N forms (e.g., organic N) that can be converted into nitrate. Here, updates to instrumentation and protocols are described, and improvements in data quality are demonstrated. METHODS: A 'heart cut' of the N2 O was implemented in the extraction system to (1) minimize introduction of contaminants into the mass spectrometer, reducing isotopic drift and (2) decrease the fraction of sample lost at the open split to improve sensitivity. Referencing protocols were updated, including a correction scheme for a weak dependence of nitrate δ(18) O values on nitrate concentration. Analyses of samples from the US GEOTRACES North Atlantic Program and of reference solutions from the same analysis batches were used to characterize performance. RESULTS: The drift is typically <0.1‰ for both δ(15) N and δ(18) O values. Within-batch and inter-batch replication yields 1 standard deviation (SD) of ≤0.06‰ for δ(15) N values and ≤0.14‰ for δ(18) O values down to 5 μM nitrate and ≤0.08‰ and ≤0.23‰ at 2 and 1 μM. The blank is typically 0.06 nmol N, 0.3% of the N in a 20 nmol N sample. Differences between reference materials in seawater are indistinguishable from reported differences for δ(15) N values, with a contraction for δ(18) O values of ≤5%. CONCLUSIONS: The new instrumentation and protocols yield nitrate isotopic data with external precision of ≤0.1‰ for large sample sets such as those derived from oceanographic sections. Further study should investigate the causes of (1) the weak dependence of nitrate δ(18) O values on nitrate concentration and (2) the inter-batch variation in the δ(18) O contraction (due mostly to oxygen atom exchange with water). Nevertheless, comprehensive correction schemes are in place for the measurement of both the δ(15) N and δ(18) O values of nitrate.
RATIONALE: The denitrifier method allows for highly sensitive measurement of the (15) N/(14) N (δ(15) N value) and (18) O/(16) O (δ(18) O value) of nitrate dissolved in natural waters and for highly sensitive δ(15) N measurement of other N forms (e.g., organic N) that can be converted into nitrate. Here, updates to instrumentation and protocols are described, and improvements in data quality are demonstrated. METHODS: A 'heart cut' of the N2 O was implemented in the extraction system to (1) minimize introduction of contaminants into the mass spectrometer, reducing isotopic drift and (2) decrease the fraction of sample lost at the open split to improve sensitivity. Referencing protocols were updated, including a correction scheme for a weak dependence of nitrate δ(18) O values on nitrate concentration. Analyses of samples from the US GEOTRACES North Atlantic Program and of reference solutions from the same analysis batches were used to characterize performance. RESULTS: The drift is typically <0.1‰ for both δ(15) N and δ(18) O values. Within-batch and inter-batch replication yields 1 standard deviation (SD) of ≤0.06‰ for δ(15) N values and ≤0.14‰ for δ(18) O values down to 5 μM nitrate and ≤0.08‰ and ≤0.23‰ at 2 and 1 μM. The blank is typically 0.06 nmol N, 0.3% of the N in a 20 nmol N sample. Differences between reference materials in seawater are indistinguishable from reported differences for δ(15) N values, with a contraction for δ(18) O values of ≤5%. CONCLUSIONS: The new instrumentation and protocols yield nitrate isotopic data with external precision of ≤0.1‰ for large sample sets such as those derived from oceanographic sections. Further study should investigate the causes of (1) the weak dependence of nitrate δ(18) O values on nitrate concentration and (2) the inter-batch variation in the δ(18) O contraction (due mostly to oxygen atom exchange with water). Nevertheless, comprehensive correction schemes are in place for the measurement of both the δ(15) N and δ(18) O values of nitrate.
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