Laser microprobe technique for stable carbon isotope analyses of organic carbon in sedimentary rocks.

  • Liu Yü
    Institute of Mineralogy, Petrology and Economic Geology, Faculty of Science, Tohoku University
  • Naraoka Hiroshi
    Institute of Mineralogy, Petrology and Economic Geology, Faculty of Science, Tohoku University
  • Hayashi Ken-ichiro
    Institute of Mineralogy, Petrology and Economic Geology, Faculty of Science, Tohoku University
  • Ohmoto Hiroshi
    Astrobiology Research Center, The Pennsylvania State University

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A technique for analyzing stable carbon isotope composition of organic carbon using a Nd-YAG laser microprobe system has been developed. Analyses were performed on graphite rod and silica-graphite discs made from mixtures of silica glass and graphite powders with a weight ratio as SiO2/C = 3/2. The sample was ablated by the laser and simultaneously combusted by laser ablation with excess O2 to produce CO2. Replicate analyses on the two types of standards under O2-atmospheric condition (8-20 torr) are reproducible to ±0.1 ‰ (1σ) for δ13C, which is in agreement with accepted precision by the conventional method. In order to examine the matrix effect by other silicate minerals in natural samples during laser ablation, the silica-graphite disc samples were also combusted by laser ablation without excess O2 to produce CO2. In this case, the amounts of CO2 produced were far smaller (<1%) than those of CO2 produced with excess O2 and the δ13C values range from -18.9 to -7.5‰. Considering the mass balance, we conclude that the matrix effects of silica or other silicates on the δ13C analyses of organic carbon can be ignored because it only result in a little positive shift (<0.2‰) in δ13C values. Application of the laser microprobe technique on δ13C analyses of organic carbon to five late Archean black shale samples (Jeerinah Formation, Hamersley Basin, Western Australia) gives δ13C values that are reproducible to ±0.1-0.3‰, and the mean δ13C values range from -37.2 to -39.1‰ which are very close to the δ13C values of the kerogens extracted from these shales. The analytical results demonstrate that the laser microprobe technique developed in this study is effective for the in situ isotope analyses of organic carbon in sedimentary rocks with a good precision of ±0.1‰.

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