Investigation into Background Levels of Small Organic Samples at the NERC Radiocarbon Laboratory
Author
Ertunç, TanyaXu, Sheng
Bryant, Charlotte L.
Currie, Margaret
Freeman, Stewart P. H. T.
Maden, Colin
Murray, Callum
Issue Date
2007-01-01
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Ertunç, T., Xu, S., Bryant, C. L., Currie, M., Freeman, S. P. H. T., Maden, C., & Murray, C. (2007). Investigation into background levels of small organic samples at the NERC Radiocarbon Laboratory. Radiocarbon, 49(2), 271-280.Journal
RadiocarbonDescription
From the 19th International Radiocarbon Conference held in Keble College, Oxford, England, April 3-7, 2006.Additional Links
http://radiocarbon.webhost.uits.arizona.edu/Abstract
Recent progress in preparation/combustion of submilligram organic samples at our laboratories is presented. Routine methods had to be modified/refined to achieve acceptable and consistent procedural blanks for organic samples smaller than 1000 mu-g C. A description of the process leading to a modified combustion method for smaller organic samples is given in detail. In addition to analyzing different background materials, the influence of different chemical reagents on the overall radiocarbon background level was investigated, such as carbon contamination arising from copper oxide of different purities and from different suppliers. Using the modified combustion method, small amounts of background materials and known-age standard IAEA-C5 were individually combusted to CO2. Below 1000 g C, organic background levels follow an inverse mass dependency when combusted with the modified method, increasing from 0.13 +/- 0.05 pMC up to 1.20 +/- 0.04 pMC for 80 mu-g C. Results for a given carbon mass were lower for combustion of etched Iceland spar calcite mineral, indicating that part of the observed background of bituminous coal was probably introduced by handling the material in atmosphere prior to combustion. Using the modified combustion method, the background-corrected activity of IAEA-C5 agreed to within 2 sigma of the consensus value of 23.05 pMC down to a sample mass of 55 mu-g C.Type
Proceedingstext
Language
enISSN
0033-8222ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1017/S0033822200042193