Deakin University
Browse

File(s) under permanent embargo

Capillary ion chromatography with on-column focusing for ultra-trace analysis of methanesulfonate and inorganic anions in limited volume Antarctic ice core samples

journal contribution
posted on 2015-08-28, 00:00 authored by Estrella Sanz Rodriguez, Sam Poynter, Mark Curran, Paul R Haddad, Robert ShellieRobert Shellie, Pavel N Nesterenko, Brett Paull
Preservation of ionic species within Antarctic ice yields a unique proxy record of the Earth's climate history. Studies have been focused until now on two proxies: the ionic components of sea salt aerosol and methanesulfonic acid. Measurement of the all of the major ionic species in ice core samples is typically carried out by ion chromatography. Former methods, whilst providing suitable detection limits, have been based upon off-column preconcentration techniques, requiring larger sample volumes, with potential for sample contamination and/or carryover. Here, a new capillary ion chromatography based analytical method has been developed for quantitative analysis of limited volume Antarctic ice core samples. The developed analytical protocol applies capillary ion chromatography (with suppressed conductivity detection) and direct on-column sample injection and focusing, thus eliminating the requirement for off-column sample preconcentration. This limits the total sample volume needed to 300μL per analysis, allowing for triplicate sample analysis with <1mL of sample. This new approach provides a reliable and robust analytical method for the simultaneous determination of organic and inorganic anions, including fluoride, methanesulfonate, chloride, sulfate and nitrate anions. Application to composite ice-core samples is demonstrated, with coupling of the capillary ion chromatograph to high resolution mass spectrometry used to confirm the presence and purity of the observed methanesulfonate peak.

History

Journal

Journal of Chromatography A

Volume

1409

Pagination

182 - 188

Publisher

Elsevier

Location

Amsterdam, The Netherlands

ISSN

0021-9673

eISSN

1873-3778

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2015, Elsevier