Bias in carbon concentration and delta C-13 measurements of organic matter due to cleaning treatments with organic solvents

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TitreBias in carbon concentration and delta C-13 measurements of organic matter due to cleaning treatments with organic solvents
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2018
AuteursMuller E, Thomazo C, Stueken EE, Hallmann C, Leider A, Chaduteau C, Buick R, Baton F, Philippot P, Ader M
JournalCHEMICAL GEOLOGY
Volume493
Pagination405-412
Date PublishedAUG 20
Type of ArticleArticle
ISSN0009-2541
Mots-clésCarbon isotope, contamination, Organic carbon, solvents, TOC
Résumé

Interpreting the organic carbon content (TOC) and stable carbon isotopic composition (delta C-13) of organic matter in the sedimentary rock record depends on our capability to accurately measure them, while excluding sources of contamination. This however becomes increasingly problematic as we analyze samples with ever-lower organic carbon content. Accordingly, organic solvents are sometimes used to remove contaminating traces of modern organic matter from ancient rock samples. However, especially for very low TOC samples, traces of solvents or their impurities remaining in the sample may contribute a significant organic contamination that can impact the bulk measurements of both TOC and delta C-13 values. This study, including three independent investigations performed in different laboratories, is the first detailed examination of the effect of cleaning treatments on the reliability of TOC and delta C-13 values in a range of natural rock samples and synthetic materials with low TOC content from below detection limit to 3330 ppm. We investigated the four most common organic solvents used to remove modern organic matter: dichloromethane (DCM), n-hexane, methanol and ethanol, and evaluated the effect of grain size and mineralogy. We find that (i) cleaning treatments with methanol, n-hexane and dichloromethane contaminate rock samples when used directly on sample powder, regardless of the grain size; (ii) this pollution buffers the natural variability and homogenizes the delta C-13 values of samples around the isotopic composition of the solvent, i. e. between -27 and -29%; (iii) the extent of contamination depends on the solvent used, DCM being the most contaminating (up to 6000 ppm) and ethanol the only solvent that does not seem to contaminate rock samples above our detection limit; (iv) sample mineralogy also exerts an influence on the extent of contamination, clay minerals being more prone to adsorb contaminants. We conclude that the response of carbon concentrations and the stable carbon isotopic composition of organic matter in geological samples to cleaning treatments is neither negligible nor systematic when investigating samples with low carbon content.

DOI10.1016/j.chemgeo.2018.06.018