Literature DB >> 30980427

A Ti(III) reduction method for one-step conversion of seawater and freshwater nitrate into N2 O for stable isotopic analysis of 15 N/14 N, 18 O/16 O and 17 O/16 O.

Mark A Altabet1, Leonard I Wassenaar2, Cedric Douence2, Rupsa Roy1.   

Abstract

RATIONALE: The nitrogen and oxygen (δ15 N, δ18 O, and δ17 O values) isotopic compositions of nitrate (NO3 - ) are crucial tracers of nutrient nitrogen (N) sources and dynamics in aquatic systems. Current methods such as bacterial denitrification or Cd-azide reduction require laborious multi-step conversions or toxic chemicals to reduce NO3 - to N2 O for 15 N and 18 O isotopic analyses by isotope ratio mass spectrometry (IRMS). Furthermore, the 17 O composition of N2 O cannot be directly disentangled using IRMS because 17 O contributes to mass 45 (15 N).
METHODS: We describe a new one-step chemical conversion method that employs Ti(III) chloride to reduce nitrate to N2 O gas in septum sample vials. Sample preparation takes only a few minutes followed by a 24-h reaction producing N2 O gas (65-75% recovery) which partitions into the headspace. The N2 O headspace was measured for 15 N, 18 O and 17 O by IRMS or laser spectrometry.
RESULTS: IRMS and laser spectrometric analyses gave accurate and reproducible N and O isotopic results down to 50 ppb (3.5 μM) NO3 -N, similar in precision to the denitrifier and Cd-azide methods. The uncertainties for dissolved nitrate reference materials (USGS32, USGS34, USGS35, IAEA-NO3 ) were ±0.2‰ for δ15 N values and ±0.3‰ for δ18 O values using IRMS. For laser-based N2 O isotope analyses the results were similar, with an δ17 O uncertainty of ±0.9‰ without any need for 15 N correction.
CONCLUSIONS: Advantages of the Ti(III) reduction method are simplicity, low cost, and no requirement for toxic chemicals or anaerobic bacterial cultures. Minor corrections may be required to account for sample nitrate concentration variance and potential chemical interferences. The Ti(III) method is easily implemented into laboratories currently using N2 O headspace sampling apparatus. We expect that the Ti(III) method will promulgate the use of N and O isotopes of nitrate in important studies of nutrient dynamics and pollution in a wide range of aquatic ecosystems.
© 2019 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Entities:  

Year:  2019        PMID: 30980427     DOI: 10.1002/rcm.8454

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Rapid Commun Mass Spectrom        ISSN: 0951-4198            Impact factor:   2.419


  2 in total

1.  Nitrate sources and mixing in the Danube watershed: implications for transboundary river basin monitoring and management.

Authors:  J Halder; Y Vystavna; L I Wassenaar
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2022-02-09       Impact factor: 4.379

2.  Challenges in measuring nitrogen isotope signatures in inorganic nitrogen forms: An interlaboratory comparison of three common measurement approaches.

Authors:  Christina Biasi; Simo Jokinen; Judith Prommer; Per Ambus; Peter Dörsch; Longfei Yu; Steve Granger; Pascal Boeckx; Katja Van Nieuland; Nicolas Brüggemann; Holger Wissel; Andrey Voropaev; Tami Zilberman; Helena Jäntti; Tatiana Trubnikova; Nina Welti; Carolina Voigt; Beata Gebus-Czupyt; Zbigniew Czupyt; Wolfgang Wanek
Journal:  Rapid Commun Mass Spectrom       Date:  2022-11-30       Impact factor: 2.586

  2 in total

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