Abstract

Abstract. Palaeoatmospheric records of carbon dioxide and its stable carbon isotope composition (δ13C) obtained from polar ice cores provide important constraints on the natural variability of the carbon cycle. However, the measurements are both analytically challenging and time-consuming; thus only data exist from a limited number of sampling sites and time periods. Additional analytical resources with high analytical precision and throughput are thus desirable to extend the existing datasets. Moreover, consistent measurements derived by independent laboratories and a variety of analytical systems help to further increase confidence in the global CO2 palaeo-reconstructions. Here, we describe our new set-up for simultaneous measurements of atmospheric CO2 mixing ratios and atmospheric δ13C and δ18O-CO2 in air extracted from ice core samples. The centrepiece of the system is a newly designed needle cracker for the mechanical release of air entrapped in ice core samples of 8–13 g operated at −45 °C. The small sample size allows for high resolution and replicate sampling schemes. In our method, CO2 is cryogenically and chromatographically separated from the bulk air and its isotopic composition subsequently determined by continuous flow isotope ratio mass spectrometry (IRMS). In combination with thermal conductivity measurement of the bulk air, the CO2 mixing ratio is calculated. The analytical precision determined from standard air sample measurements over ice is ±1.9 ppm for CO2 and ±0.09 ‰ for δ13C. In a laboratory intercomparison study with CSIRO (Aspendale, Australia), good agreement between CO2 and δ13C results is found for Law Dome ice core samples. Replicate analysis of these samples resulted in a pooled standard deviation of 2.0 ppm for CO2 and 0.11 ‰ for δ13C. These numbers are good, though they are rather conservative estimates of the overall analytical precision achieved for single ice sample measurements. Facilitated by the small sample requirement, replicate measurements are feasible, allowing the method precision to be improved potentially. Further, new analytical approaches are introduced for the accurate correction of the procedural blank and for a consistent detection of measurement outliers, which is based on δ18O-CO2 and the exchange of oxygen between CO2 and the surrounding ice (H2O).

Highlights

  • Polar ice cores are unique in providing direct information of the past atmospheric composition

  • Changes in the global carbon cycle fluxes are imprinted in the stable carbon isotope signal of atmospheric CO2 (δ13C, e.g. Köhler et al, 2006)

  • System-specific analytical bias for CO2 concentration and CO2 stable isotope measurements can result from fractionation in the analytical system related to adsorption and desorption processes, in the extraction unit (Zumbrunn et al, 1982), non-quantitative trapping and releasing of gas and from gas chromatography (GC) separation

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Summary

Introduction

Polar ice cores are unique in providing direct information of the past atmospheric composition. While measurements of CO2 mixing ratios by mechanical extraction systems are affected in the transition zone from bubble to clathrate ice, only a decrease in precision but no systematic effect could be observed for δ13C analysis of CO2 (Schaefer et al, 2011 and references therein). For the mechanical extraction system (NC) the released air is first expanded over a water trap into a small volume where the gas pressure is measured for evaluation of the CO2 mixing ratio in combination with the IRMS signal. The Laboratoire de Glaciologie et Géophysique de l’ Environnement (LGGE, Grenoble, France) uses a ball mill for mechanical extraction before the air is directly released to the inlet system of a coupled GC–IRMS for CO2 mixing ratio and CO2 stable isotope analysis (Barnola et al, 1995; Lourantou, 2009). Due to the intended small sample size, the extraction unit was coupled to a continuous flow GC–IRMS set-up, with the benefit of overcoming the problem of interference from isobaric N2O and fragments of remaining contamination from drilling fluid

Dry extraction unit
Analytical system
Standards
PreCon system
Evaluation and calibration
Procedural blank correction
Analytical precision for the measurement of air samples
Natural ice samples – laboratory comparison and reproducibility
Outlier detection based on δ18O-CO2 and δ18O-H2O
Conclusions and outlook
Full Text
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