An extraction method for nitrogen isotope measurement of ammonium in low concentrated environment

Ammonia (NH3) participates in nucleation and growth of aerosols and thus plays a major role in atmospheric transparency, pollution, health, and climate related issues. Understanding its emission sources through nitrogen stable isotopes is therefore a major focus of current work to mitigate the adver...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lamothe, Alexis, Savarino, Joel, Ginot, Patrick, Soussaintjean, Lison, Gautier, Elsa, Akers, Pete D., Caillon, Nicolas, Erbland, Joseph
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-2023-481
https://noa.gwlb.de/receive/cop_mods_00066542
https://noa.gwlb.de/servlets/MCRFileNodeServlet/cop_derivate_00065023/egusphere-2023-481.pdf
https://egusphere.copernicus.org/preprints/2023/egusphere-2023-481/egusphere-2023-481.pdf
Description
Summary:Ammonia (NH3) participates in nucleation and growth of aerosols and thus plays a major role in atmospheric transparency, pollution, health, and climate related issues. Understanding its emission sources through nitrogen stable isotopes is therefore a major focus of current work to mitigate the adverse effects of aerosol formation. Since ice cores can preserve the past chemical composition of the atmosphere for centuries, they are a top tool of choice for understanding past NH3 emissions through ammonium (NH4+), the form of NH3 archived in ice. However, the remote or high-altitude sites where glaciers and ice sheets are typically localized have relatively low fluxes of atmospheric NH4+ deposition which makes ice core samples very sensitive to laboratory NH3 contamination. As a result, accurate techniques for identifying and tracking NH3 emissions through concentration and isotopic measurements are highly sought to constrain uncertainties in NH3 emission inventories and atmospheric reactivity unknowns. Here, we describe a solid phase extraction method for NH4+ samples of low concentration that limits external contamination and produces precise isotopic results. By limiting NH3atm exposure with a scavenging fume hood and concentrating the targeted NH4+ through ion exchange resin, we successfully achieve isotopic analysis of 50 nmol NH4+ samples with a 0.6 ‰ standard deviation. This extraction method is applied to an alpine glacier ice core from Col Du Dôme, Mont-Blanc, where we successfully demonstrate the analytical approach through the analysis of two replicate 8 m water equivalent ice cores representing 4 years of accumulation with a reproducibility of ± 2.1 ‰. Applying this methodology to other ice cores in alpine and polar environments will open new opportunities for understanding past changes in NH3 emissions and atmospheric chemistry.