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Determining the sources of (sub)permil-level inaccuracy during laser ablation-MC-ICPMS boron isotope measurements of carbonates

Determining the sources of (sub)permil-level inaccuracy during laser ablation-MC-ICPMS boron isotope measurements of carbonates
Determining the sources of (sub)permil-level inaccuracy during laser ablation-MC-ICPMS boron isotope measurements of carbonates
Recent developments in spatially-resolved boron isotopic analysis using laser ablation as a means of sample introduction to MC-ICPMS instruments (LA-MC-ICPMS) increasingly allow researchers to explore the spatial heterogeneity of the boron isotopic composition of a range of geochemical applications, for example in palaeoclimatology and mantle petrology. However, previous work has shown that a diffuse interference centred near 10B, when measuring samples with a calcium-rich matrix, can significantly bias especially the measurement on 10B, affecting the accuracy of boron isotope measurements. Although several correction approaches have yielded sufficiently accurate analyses of δ11B in calcium carbonate, the root cause of this interference is still not fully resolved. Here, we explore the various potential sources of inaccuracy in boron isotope measurements made using (LA-)MC-ICPMS by experimenting with dry and wet plasma conditions, in both solution and laser ablation mode (in the former case, our solution (Ca–Mg)/B ratios broadly mimic those found in natural samples). In solution mode, we find that irrespective of wet or dry plasma conditions, the introduction of a Ca-containing matrix yields a baseline up to ∼4 and ∼14 times higher around m/z ≈ 10 for wet and dry plasma conditions, respectively, compared to both a Mg-only matrix and lack of matrix. In order to explore this further, we performed mass scans around m/z ≈ 10 during laser ablation of different carbonates with varying matrix [Ca]. These show that the m/z ≈ 10 interference scales linearly with a mixture of the calcium content of the analyte matrix and 40Ar4+ ion beam intensity, as previously hypothesised. Moreover, by experimenting with different plasma loading scenarios during the ablation of CaCO3, i.e. varying laser spot sizes, we find that permil-level inaccuracies in δ11B may occur when the analyte ablated mass is significantly different than that of the standard used to calibrate instrumental mass bias. This is important given that we also show that different commonly-used reference materials ablate at very different rates, which illustrates the need for a careful standardisation approach irrespective of broader matrix effects when sub-permil level accuracy and precision are desirable when utilising LA-MC-ICPMS.
0267-9477
2409-2420
Coenen, Douglas
51fff236-26c2-4ded-8f46-b86910f511ea
Evans, David
878c65c7-eab9-4362-896b-166e165eb94b
Jurikova, Hana
41bfb521-3981-436c-b5ce-ced0ff555946
Dumont, Matthew
ff70c27b-dcb7-4493-aa54-2e733dd1b741
Rae, James
8788a3a1-fec8-46c2-95a4-a59ce25416f5
Müller, Wolfgang
360a71f7-0b47-4ff3-8c32-1912d70401aa
Coenen, Douglas
51fff236-26c2-4ded-8f46-b86910f511ea
Evans, David
878c65c7-eab9-4362-896b-166e165eb94b
Jurikova, Hana
41bfb521-3981-436c-b5ce-ced0ff555946
Dumont, Matthew
ff70c27b-dcb7-4493-aa54-2e733dd1b741
Rae, James
8788a3a1-fec8-46c2-95a4-a59ce25416f5
Müller, Wolfgang
360a71f7-0b47-4ff3-8c32-1912d70401aa

Coenen, Douglas, Evans, David, Jurikova, Hana, Dumont, Matthew, Rae, James and Müller, Wolfgang (2024) Determining the sources of (sub)permil-level inaccuracy during laser ablation-MC-ICPMS boron isotope measurements of carbonates. Journal of Analytical Atomic Spectrometry, 39, 2409-2420. (doi:10.1039/D4JA00154K).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Recent developments in spatially-resolved boron isotopic analysis using laser ablation as a means of sample introduction to MC-ICPMS instruments (LA-MC-ICPMS) increasingly allow researchers to explore the spatial heterogeneity of the boron isotopic composition of a range of geochemical applications, for example in palaeoclimatology and mantle petrology. However, previous work has shown that a diffuse interference centred near 10B, when measuring samples with a calcium-rich matrix, can significantly bias especially the measurement on 10B, affecting the accuracy of boron isotope measurements. Although several correction approaches have yielded sufficiently accurate analyses of δ11B in calcium carbonate, the root cause of this interference is still not fully resolved. Here, we explore the various potential sources of inaccuracy in boron isotope measurements made using (LA-)MC-ICPMS by experimenting with dry and wet plasma conditions, in both solution and laser ablation mode (in the former case, our solution (Ca–Mg)/B ratios broadly mimic those found in natural samples). In solution mode, we find that irrespective of wet or dry plasma conditions, the introduction of a Ca-containing matrix yields a baseline up to ∼4 and ∼14 times higher around m/z ≈ 10 for wet and dry plasma conditions, respectively, compared to both a Mg-only matrix and lack of matrix. In order to explore this further, we performed mass scans around m/z ≈ 10 during laser ablation of different carbonates with varying matrix [Ca]. These show that the m/z ≈ 10 interference scales linearly with a mixture of the calcium content of the analyte matrix and 40Ar4+ ion beam intensity, as previously hypothesised. Moreover, by experimenting with different plasma loading scenarios during the ablation of CaCO3, i.e. varying laser spot sizes, we find that permil-level inaccuracies in δ11B may occur when the analyte ablated mass is significantly different than that of the standard used to calibrate instrumental mass bias. This is important given that we also show that different commonly-used reference materials ablate at very different rates, which illustrates the need for a careful standardisation approach irrespective of broader matrix effects when sub-permil level accuracy and precision are desirable when utilising LA-MC-ICPMS.

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Published date: 30 July 2024

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Local EPrints ID: 502482
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/502482
ISSN: 0267-9477
PURE UUID: 534813e1-f3aa-4031-af6f-8f8810b6ff16
ORCID for David Evans: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-8685-671X

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Date deposited: 26 Jun 2025 17:14
Last modified: 27 Jun 2025 02:09

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Contributors

Author: Douglas Coenen
Author: David Evans ORCID iD
Author: Hana Jurikova
Author: Matthew Dumont
Author: James Rae
Author: Wolfgang Müller

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