New Methods for Measuring Atmospheric Heavy Noble Gas Isotope and Elemental Ratios in Ice Core Samples

Bereiter, Bernhard; Kawamura, Kenji; Severinghaus, Jeffrey P. (2018). New Methods for Measuring Atmospheric Heavy Noble Gas Isotope and Elemental Ratios in Ice Core Samples. Rapid communications in mass spectrometry, 32(10), pp. 801-814. Wiley 10.1002/rcm.8099

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RATIONALE

The global ocean constitutes the largest heat buffer in the global climate system, but little is known about its past changes. The isotopic and elemental ratios of heavy noble gases (krypton and xenon), together with argon and nitrogen in trapped air from ice cores can be used to reconstruct past mean ocean temperatures (MOTs). Here we introduce two successively developed methods to measure these parameters with a sufficient precision to provide new constraints on past MOT changes.

METHODS

The air from an 800g ice sample – containing roughly 80 ml STP air – was extracted and processed to be analyzed on two independent dual inlet isotope ratio mass spectrometers. The primary isotope ratios (δ15N, δ40Ar and δ86Kr values) were obtained with precisions in the range of 1 per meg (0.001‰) per mass unit. The three elemental ratio values δKr/N2, δXe/N2 and δXe/Kr were obtained using sequential (non‐simultaneous) peak‐jumping, reaching precisions in the range of 0.1 ‐ 0.3‰.

RESULTS

The latest version of the method achieves a 30% to 50% better precision on the elemental ratios and a twofold better sample throughput than the previous one. The method development uncovered an unexpected source of artefactual gas fractionation in a closed system that is caused by adiabatic cooling and warming of gases (termed adiabatic fractionation) – a potential source of measurement artifacts in other methods.

CONCLUSIONS

The precisions of the three elemental ratios δKr/N2, δXe/N2 and δXe/Kr – which all contain the same MOT information – suggest smaller uncertainties for reconstructed MOTs (+/‐0.3‐0.1°C) than previous studies have attained. Due to different sensitivities of the noble gases to MOT changes, δXe/N2 provides the best constraints on the MOT under the given precisions followed by δXe/Kr, and δKr/N2; however, using all of them helps to detect methodological artifacts and issues with ice quality.

Item Type:

Journal Article (Original Article)

Division/Institute:

08 Faculty of Science > Physics Institute > Climate and Environmental Physics
10 Strategic Research Centers > Oeschger Centre for Climate Change Research (OCCR)

UniBE Contributor:

Bereiter, Bernhard

Subjects:

500 Science > 530 Physics

ISSN:

0951-4198

Publisher:

Wiley

Language:

English

Submitter:

Monika Wälti-Stampfli

Date Deposited:

08 May 2018 09:54

Last Modified:

05 Dec 2022 15:12

Publisher DOI:

10.1002/rcm.8099

BORIS DOI:

10.7892/boris.113870

URI:

https://boris.unibe.ch/id/eprint/113870

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