Organic contamination in online laser-based plant stem and leaf water isotope measurements for pre-extracted samples.
Jiangpeng CuiTian LideWusheng YuPublished in: Isotopes in environmental and health studies (2021)
Water stable isotopes have been widely used as natural tracers to investigate soil-plant-atmosphere interactions. Recent developments in induction module cavity ring-down spectroscopy (IM-CRDS) have made it possible to rapidly complete isotope analyses, and to combust co-extracted organic compounds at the same time. However, the agreement between IM-CRDS and isotope ratio mass spectrometry (IRMS) analyses has generally been poor and was primarily attributable to spectral interference of IM-CRDS. Here we evaluated the impacts of organic contamination on the isotope ratios using IM-CRDS with two different methods. No spectral interference was observed for solid samples measured directly by IM-CRDS, whereas clear organic contamination occurred in isotope analyses for pre-extracted plant stem and leaf samples. Our results demonstrate that IM-CRDS can fully combust co-extracted organic compounds by in-line oxidation in the direct measurement of solid samples, although this may not guarantee that the IM-CRDS can obtain better isotopic data than IRMS. It may be risky to evaluate the performance of IM-CRDS by measuring pre-extracted water samples because cryogenic vacuum distillation is likely to introduce extra organic compounds, which may not be fully removed during subsequent IM-CRDS measurement. In addition, spectral variables are useful for post-processing corrections.
Keyphrases
- gas chromatography
- mass spectrometry
- water soluble
- risk assessment
- optical coherence tomography
- drinking water
- high resolution
- magnetic resonance imaging
- healthcare
- human health
- social media
- computed tomography
- magnetic resonance
- dual energy
- electronic health record
- deep learning
- heavy metals
- hydrogen peroxide
- tandem mass spectrometry
- cell wall
- solid phase extraction
- contrast enhanced