JpGU-AGU Joint Meeting 2020

Presentation information

[J] Poster

B (Biogeosciences ) » B-BG Biogeosciences & Geosphere-Biosphere Interactions

[B-BG02] Interaction between Life, Water, Mineral, and Atmosphere

convener:Yuichiro Ueno(Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Tokyo Institute of Technology), Takeshi Kakegawa(Graduate School of Science, Tohoku University), Ken Takai(Extremobiosphere Research Center, Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science & Technology), Yohey Suzuki(Graduate School of Science, The University of Tokyo)

[BBG02-P01] Analysis of 13C-13C isotopologue of ethane and ethanol by a fluorination method

*Taguchi Koudai 1, Tomonari Yamamoto1, Mayuko Nakagawa1,2, Alexis Gilbert1,2, Yuichiro Ueno1,2,3 (1.Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Tokyo Institute of Technology, 2.Earth-Life Science Institute (WPI-ELSI), Tokyo Institute of Technology, 3.Department of Subsurface Geobiological Analysis and Research (D-SUGAR), Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology (JAMSTEC))

Keywords:Clumped isotope, Fluorination, Isotopologue

Doubly-substituted isotope species (“clumped isotopes”) of a molecule potentially records important biogeochemical information such as its temperature of formation and/or its (bio)synthetic pathway. The abundance of clumped isotopologue can be viewed as a deviation from its stochastic abundance, conventionally denoted as a D value (i.e., D = (Rsample/Rstochastic – 1)). Notably, when an isotope exchange reaction occurs at equilibrium, the abundance of clumped isotopologue reflects its temperature and thus is used as a geothermometer. Recentlly, 18O-18O species in oxygen and 15N-15N in nitrogen have been measured and their abundance helped distinguishing between atmospheric, volcanic and biological sources [1,2]. Recently, Clog et al [3] measured 13C-13C species of ethane from natural gas, highlighting the potential of the approach to study thec biogeochemistry of organic molecules.

Yet, measuring 13C-13C species at natural abundance is not trivial. The common method used to measure the bulk 13C isotopic composition of ethane consists in its combustion to CO2, which leads to the loss of ethane molecules, and thus of its 13C-13C isotopologue. Clog et al (2018) measured the abundance of clumped isotopologue in ethane in natural gasusing high-resolution gas source mass spectrometer (MAT253 Ultra) which allows the sepoaration and quantification of 13C-13C isotopologues of ethane.

Here, we propose a new alternative method for measuring 13C-13C isotopologue of C2 molecules - not only to ethane but also potentially applicable to various organic compounds - using a conventional isotope ratio mass spactrometer. Because fluorine has only one stable isotope, 13C-13C isotope species in C2 molecules were measured as C2F6 arising from the fluorination of C2 molecules. This method is applicable to ethane from natural gas samples but also to ethanol from the fermentation of sugars. Ethanol is first converted into ethene through dehydration reaction then fluoridated to C2F6.

The fluorination reaction is first conducted at 77K for 10min and then at 173K for 30min using ice ethanol slush adding liquid nitrogen into ethanol. During the fluorination, the mild condition at low temperature is critical to avoid to break the C-C bonding. On the other hand, further fluorination of the intermediate requires higher temperature up to 298K. Therefore, the sample was thawed back to room tempareture for a quantitative conversion.

The yield of fluorination cannnot be strictly contorolled and varies within 5% around the average value. In order to estimate the effect of the conversion efficiency on the D13C13C values, fluorination reactions were conducted at lower yields by changing the amount of fluorine against the starting ethene/ethane. Whereas the D13C13C values of ethane are affected at low yields, the D13C13C valies are constant at the yield above 50%. On the other hand, the D13C13C values of ethene are constant for all yields. Therefore, we can obtain the reproducible D13C13C values at a yield commonly reached 60% or 80% for ethene and ethane, respectively.

Reproducibility of the whole prorocol, including chemical modification steps and measurement of C2F6 isotopologues is 0.14‰ for all the compounds. We applied this method to sevral C2 molecules: ethane from natural gas (thermogenic and abiotic), biologically derived ethanol, as well as abiotic ethane produced experimentally by diverse processes (UV irradiation, spark discharge, Fischer-Tropsch synthesis and Gamma ray irradiation).

Ethane from thermogenic natural gas samples and biologically derived ethanol show a narrow range of D13C13C values varying from 0.72‰ to 0.90‰. In contrast, abiotic ethane, either from natural samples or from experiments shows D13C13C values systematically lower than those of biotic origin. C-C clumping provides new potential (a)biomarkers to the biogeochemistry field.





Reference

[1] Yeung LY, Li S, Kohl IE, et al. Extreme enrichment in atmospheric 15N15N. Sci Adv. 2017;3(11):1-10. doi:10.1126/sciadv.aao6741



[2] Yeung LY, Ash JL, Young ED. Biological signatures in clumped isotopes of O2. Science (80- ). 2015;348(6233):431-434.



[3] Clog M, Lawson M, Peterson B, Ferreira AA, Santos Neto E V., Eiler JM. A reconnaissance study of 13C–13C clumping in ethane from natural gas. Geochim Cosmochim Acta. 2018;223:229-244. doi:10.1016/j.gca.2017.12.004