Cadmium Isotope Variations in the Oceans

A number of previous studies have identified considerable mass dependent variations in the Cd isotope compositions of both terrestrial and extraterrestrial samples. On Earth, stable isotope effects for Cd are particularly prominent in the oceans, and the largest natural terrestrial Cd isotope fracti...

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Main Author: Xue, Zichen
Other Authors: Rehkamper, Mark, van de Flierdt, Tina, Natural Environment Research Council (Great Britain), Lee Family Scholarship
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: Imperial College London 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/10547
https://doi.org/10.25560/10547
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spelling ftimperialcol:oai:spiral.imperial.ac.uk:10044/1/10547 2023-05-15T17:36:55+02:00 Cadmium Isotope Variations in the Oceans Xue, Zichen Rehkamper, Mark van de Flierdt, Tina Natural Environment Research Council (Great Britain) Lee Family Scholarship 2012-11 http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/10547 https://doi.org/10.25560/10547 eng eng Imperial College London Earth Science and Engineering Thesis or dissertation Doctoral Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) 2012 ftimperialcol https://doi.org/10.25560/10547 2019-11-14T23:38:16Z A number of previous studies have identified considerable mass dependent variations in the Cd isotope compositions of both terrestrial and extraterrestrial samples. On Earth, stable isotope effects for Cd are particularly prominent in the oceans, and the largest natural terrestrial Cd isotope fractionations of about 4‰ have been reported for Cd-depleted surface seawater. These effects have generally been attributed to reflect isotope fractionation of Cd that occurs during biological uptake and utilization of dissolved seawater Cd. This finding confirms studies, which identified Cd as an essential marine micronutrient. This was first inferred from the phosphate-like distribution of the metal in the oceans and more recently demonstrated by work, which confirmed that Cd can act as catalytic metal ion in carbonic anhydrase, an enzyme which plays a central role in inorganic carbon acquisition of phytoplankton in the oceans. The marine Cd isotope fractionations are thus of interest, as they can be used to study the cycling of the micronutrient Cd as well as its impact on ocean productivity and the global carbon cycle. As part of this PhD project, I have developed a new procedure for Cd isotope analyses of seawater, which is suitable for samples as large as 20 L and Cd concentrations as low as 1 pmol/L. The procedure involves use of a 111Cd-113Cd double spike, co-precipitation of Cd from seawater with Al(OH)3 Cd purification by column chromatography, and subsequent isotope analysis by MC-ICP-MS (multiple collector inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry). The methodology can routinely provide є114=110Cd data with a precision of about ± 0:5є (2sd) when at least 20-30 ng of natural Cd are available for analysis. However, even seawater samples with Cd contents of only 1-3 ng can be analysed with a reproducibility of about ±3 to ± 5є. The new methodology was applied to investigate Cd isotope variations in about 150 seawater samples from the North Atlantic Ocean, the Southern Ocean HNLC (high nutrient low chlorophyll) region, and the Peruvian oxygen minimum zone in the Eastern Pacific Ocean. The samples exhibited variable but highly systematic Cd isotope variations that were comprehensively interpreted in the context of previously published oceanographic and biogeochemical data. Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis North Atlantic Southern Ocean Imperial College London: Spiral Southern Ocean Pacific
institution Open Polar
collection Imperial College London: Spiral
op_collection_id ftimperialcol
language English
description A number of previous studies have identified considerable mass dependent variations in the Cd isotope compositions of both terrestrial and extraterrestrial samples. On Earth, stable isotope effects for Cd are particularly prominent in the oceans, and the largest natural terrestrial Cd isotope fractionations of about 4‰ have been reported for Cd-depleted surface seawater. These effects have generally been attributed to reflect isotope fractionation of Cd that occurs during biological uptake and utilization of dissolved seawater Cd. This finding confirms studies, which identified Cd as an essential marine micronutrient. This was first inferred from the phosphate-like distribution of the metal in the oceans and more recently demonstrated by work, which confirmed that Cd can act as catalytic metal ion in carbonic anhydrase, an enzyme which plays a central role in inorganic carbon acquisition of phytoplankton in the oceans. The marine Cd isotope fractionations are thus of interest, as they can be used to study the cycling of the micronutrient Cd as well as its impact on ocean productivity and the global carbon cycle. As part of this PhD project, I have developed a new procedure for Cd isotope analyses of seawater, which is suitable for samples as large as 20 L and Cd concentrations as low as 1 pmol/L. The procedure involves use of a 111Cd-113Cd double spike, co-precipitation of Cd from seawater with Al(OH)3 Cd purification by column chromatography, and subsequent isotope analysis by MC-ICP-MS (multiple collector inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry). The methodology can routinely provide є114=110Cd data with a precision of about ± 0:5є (2sd) when at least 20-30 ng of natural Cd are available for analysis. However, even seawater samples with Cd contents of only 1-3 ng can be analysed with a reproducibility of about ±3 to ± 5є. The new methodology was applied to investigate Cd isotope variations in about 150 seawater samples from the North Atlantic Ocean, the Southern Ocean HNLC (high nutrient low chlorophyll) region, and the Peruvian oxygen minimum zone in the Eastern Pacific Ocean. The samples exhibited variable but highly systematic Cd isotope variations that were comprehensively interpreted in the context of previously published oceanographic and biogeochemical data.
author2 Rehkamper, Mark
van de Flierdt, Tina
Natural Environment Research Council (Great Britain)
Lee Family Scholarship
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Xue, Zichen
spellingShingle Xue, Zichen
Cadmium Isotope Variations in the Oceans
author_facet Xue, Zichen
author_sort Xue, Zichen
title Cadmium Isotope Variations in the Oceans
title_short Cadmium Isotope Variations in the Oceans
title_full Cadmium Isotope Variations in the Oceans
title_fullStr Cadmium Isotope Variations in the Oceans
title_full_unstemmed Cadmium Isotope Variations in the Oceans
title_sort cadmium isotope variations in the oceans
publisher Imperial College London
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/10547
https://doi.org/10.25560/10547
geographic Southern Ocean
Pacific
geographic_facet Southern Ocean
Pacific
genre North Atlantic
Southern Ocean
genre_facet North Atlantic
Southern Ocean
op_doi https://doi.org/10.25560/10547
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