Experimental Results (Jan 2020)

Oxidized silver cups can skew oxygen isotope results of small samples

  • Man-Yin Tsang,
  • Weiqi Yao,
  • Kevin Tse,
  • Il-Nam Kim

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1017/exp.2020.15
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1

Abstract

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One of the commonly used analytical approaches for measuring oxygen isotope ratios δ18O of solids (organic and inorganic) is to pyrolyze the samples to gaseous phases and then send the gas into an isotope ratio mass spectrometer system. Solid samples for δ18O measurements are usually stored in silver cups because of its low reactivity towards oxygen and other oxidants. Samples in silver cups can be dropped directly into the carbon column of the pyrolysis furnace. However, the silver cups can tarnish and then be oxidized over a prolonged storage period. We find that while a small amount of silver oxides does not affect measurements with appreciable sample sizes, it can skew isotope results of small samples. We thus recommend careful storage of samples in silver cups to minimize oxidation, such as under an air-isolated condition, and avoiding prolonged storage for accurate δ18O measurements.

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