4.8 Article

Stable Isotope Analysis of Intact Oxyanions Using Electrospray Quadrupole-Orbitrap Mass Spectrometry

Journal

ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 92, Issue 4, Pages 3077-3085

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.analchem.9b04486

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Funding

  1. Beckman Institute
  2. NIH [1S10OD02001301]

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The stable isotopes of sulfate, nitrate, and phosphate are frequently used to study geobiological processes of the atmosphere, ocean, as well as land. Conventionally, the isotopes of these and other oxyanions are measured by isotope-ratio sector mass spectrometers after conversion into gases. Such methods are prone to various limitations on sensitivity, sample throughput, or precision. In addition, there is no general tool that can analyze several oxyanions or all the chemical elements they contain. Here, we describe a new approach that can potentially overcome some of these limitations based on electrospray hyphenated with Quadrupole Orbitrap mass spectrometry. This technique yields an average accuracy of 1-2 parts per thousand for sulfate delta S-34 and delta O-18 and nitrate delta N-15 and delta O-18, based on in-house and international standards. Less abundant variants such as delta O-17, delta S-33, and delta S-36, and the S-34-O-18 clumped sulfate can be quantified simultaneously. The observed precision of isotope ratios is limited by the number of ions counted. The counting of rare ions can be accelerated by removing abundant ions with the quadrupole mass filter. Electrospray mass spectrometry (ESMS) exhibits high-throughput and sufficient sensitivity. For example, less than 1 nmol sulfate is required to determine O-18/S-34 ratios with 0.2 parts per thousand precision within minutes. A purification step is recommended for environmental samples as our proposed technique is susceptible to matrix effects. Building upon these initial provisions, new features of the isotopic anatomy of mineral ions can now be explored with ESMS instruments that are increasingly available to bioanalytical laboratories.

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