کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
---|---|---|---|---|
6436712 | 1637607 | 2014 | 11 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |

- We present a new approach to obtain Os isotopic compositions for sub-ng Os samples.
- We use static collection Faraday cups equipped with 1012 Ω amplifiers on N-TIMS.
- At 192OsO3â > 0.02 V, within-run repeatability on Os isotopic ratios is within ± 0.1%.
- Mean values of Os isotopic ratios are within ± 0.1% of the accepted values.
- At 192OsO3â > 0.5 V, within-run repeatability of 186Os/188Os falls within 30-50 ppm.
We present a new approach to obtain rapid and precise (0.1 % or better) Os isotopic compositions for small (nanogram to sub-nanogram) amounts of Os extracted from geological samples using static collection with Faraday cups and amplifiers equipped with 1012 Ω resistors, by negative thermal ionization mass spectrometry (N-TIMS/Triton Plus). The results show that the measurement repeatability of Os isotopic ratios (190Os/188Os, 187Os/188Os and 186Os/188Os) changes as a function of signal intensity that varied from 0.005 to 0.05 V for 192OsO3â (here and throughout the text, given intensities are equivalent signals that would be obtained using a 1011 Ω standard amplifier; 0.001 V (1 mV) is equivalent to ~ 62500 cps). At 192OsO3â ion beams greater than 0.02 V with 50 ratios measured over a 10 min acquisition time, the repeatability on 187Os/188Os, as well as 186Os/188Os and 190Os/188Os, is better than that obtained by the conventional peak-hopping electron multiplier (SEM) at 192OsO3â = ~ 200,000 cps with 500-100 ratios measured over a 30-60 min acquisition time. At 192OsO3â ion beams of ~ 0.04 V or above, the 187Os/188Os and 186Os/188Os data for loads of 1 and 0.1 ng Os reference materials can be measured with a repeatability of < 0.1% (2Ï) and deviate by < 0.1% from the accepted values. Similar results can be achieved for Os load sizes in geological samples as low as ~ 0.025 ng. In addition, duplicate Faraday measurements of six spiked peridotitic samples (total Os loaded = 0.3-1.2 ng) yield results within uncertainty of data obtained by peak-hopping SEM, including both 187Os/188Os and Os concentration. At much higher 192OsO3â ion beams (~ 0.5-1 V) with 300 ratios taken (total acquisition time circa one hour), the Faraday measurements of 1 to 3 ng Os loads of reference material solutions can generate high-precision 186Os/188Os data with a repeatability of 30-50 ppm and a mean intermediate precision of 10-30 ppm. Collectively, our tests demonstrate that the use of Faraday cups equipped with 1012 Ω amplifiers in a static collection mode by N-TIMS can rapidly produce precise and accurate (within 0.1 %) Os isotopic data (both 187Os/188Os and 186Os/188Os) for small amounts of Os (as low as 0.025 ng) extracted from geological samples. The optimum 192OsO3â signal is 0.04 V or above to achieve the best results. While the smaller signal intensities used in concert with 1012 Ω amplifiers necessarily yield lower precision measurements than the best achievable with larger signals on 1011 Ω amplifiers, the repeatability we have achieved on reference materials can expand the application of the 190Pt-186Os decay system to geological samples containing significantly less Os than those normally measured on 1011 Ω amplifiers, if isotopic variations in excess of 50 ppm are present.
Journal: Chemical Geology - Volume 363, 10 January 2014, Pages 301-311