Sanz-Robinson Jethro, Brisco Trevor, Warr Oliver, Jabeen Iffat, Lacrampe-Couloume Georges, Hanley Jacob J, Sherwood Lollar Barbara
Department of Earth Sciences, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Department of Geology, Saint Mary's University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada.
Rapid Commun Mass Spectrom. 2021 Oct 30;35(20):e9170. doi: 10.1002/rcm.9170.
The isotopic composition of hydrocarbons trapped in rocks on the microscale (fluid inclusions, mineral grain boundaries, microfractures) can provide powerful information on geological and biological processes but are an analytical challenge due to low concentrations. We present a new approach for the extraction and carbon isotopic analysis of methane (CH ) and hydrocarbons in trapped volatiles in crystalline rocks.
An off-line crusher with cryogenic trapping and a custom-made silica glass U-trap were attached to an external injector port on a continuous flow gas chromatograph/combustion/isotope ratio mass spectrometer to demonstrate the accuracy, reproducibility, and sensitivity of δ C measurements for CH .
The method can isotopically characterize CH in crushed rock samples with concentrations as low as 3.5 × 10 mol/g of rock, and both sample and isotopic standards are analyzed with an accuracy and reproducibility of ±0.5‰. High H O/CH ratios of 98 to 500 have no effect on measured δ C values. The method is successfully applied to natural samples from the north range of Sudbury Basin, Ontario, Canada. The δ C isotopic signatures of CH trapped microscopically in rock from the north range overlap significantly with that of CH contained in larger scale flowing fracture fluids from the same part of the Sudbury Basin, indicating a potential genetic link.
A novel method for δ C analysis was developed for the extraction of nanomole quantities of CH trapped microscopically in rocks. The technique has an accuracy and reproducibility comparable to that of on-line crushing techniques but importantly provides the capability of crushing larger rock quantities (up to 100 g). The benefit is improved detection levels for trace hydrocarbon species. Such a capability will be important for future extension of such crushing techniques for measurement of H/ H for CH , clumped isotopologues of CH and other trapped volatiles species, such as C H , C H , C H , CO and N .