A New Method for Estimating Contact Time from O2 and CO2 Concentrations during Rebreathing Air

Author(s):  
Masaji Mochizuki ◽  
Tomoko Kagawa ◽  
Katsuo Uchida ◽  
Izumi Shibuya
2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (12) ◽  
pp. 6703-6731
Author(s):  
Ikumi Oyabu ◽  
Kenji Kawamura ◽  
Kyotaro Kitamura ◽  
Remi Dallmayr ◽  
Akihiro Kitamura ◽  
...  

Abstract. Air in polar ice cores provides unique information on past climatic and atmospheric changes. We developed a new method combining wet extraction, gas chromatography and mass spectrometry for high-precision, simultaneous measurements of eight air components (CH4, N2O and CO2 concentrations; δ15N, δ18O, δO2∕N2 and δAr∕N2; and total air content) from an ice-core sample of ∼ 60 g. The ice sample is evacuated for ∼ 2 h and melted under vacuum, and the released air is continuously transferred into a sample tube at 10 K within 10 min. The air is homogenized in the sample tube overnight at room temperature and split into two aliquots for mass spectrometric and gas chromatographic measurements. Care is taken to minimize (1) contamination of greenhouse gases by using a long evacuation time, (2) consumption of oxygen during sample storage by a passivation treatment on sample tubes, and (3) fractionation of isotopic ratios with a long homogenization time for splitting. Precision is assessed by analyzing standard gases with artificial ice and duplicate measurements of the Dome Fuji and NEEM ice cores. The overall reproducibility (1 SD) of duplicate ice-core analyses are 3.2 ppb, 2.2 ppb and 2.9 ppm for CH4, N2O and CO2 concentrations; 0.006 ‰, 0.011 ‰, 0.09 ‰ and 0.12 ‰ for δ15N, δ18O, δO2∕N2 and δAr∕N2; and 0.63 mLSTP kg−1 for total air content, respectively. Our new method successfully combines the high-precision, small-sample and multiple-species measurements, with a wide range of applications for ice-core paleoenvironmental studies.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ikumi Oyabu ◽  
Kenji Kawamura ◽  
Kyotaro Kitamura ◽  
Remi Dallmayr ◽  
Akihiro Kitamura ◽  
...  

Abstract. Air in polar ice cores provides various information on past climatic and atmospheric changes. We developed a new method combining wet extraction, gas chromatography and mass spectrometry, for high-precision, simultaneous measurements of eight air components (CH4, N2O and CO2 concentrations, δ15N, δ18O, δO2/N2, δAr/N2 and total air content) from an ice core sample of ~60 g. The ice sample is evacuated for ~2 hours and melted under vacuum, and the released air is continuously transferred into a sample tube at 10 K within 10 minutes. The air is homogenized in the sample tube overnight at room temperature, and split into two aliquots for mass spectrometric and gas chromatographic measurements. Cares are taken to minimize contamination of greenhouse gases with long evacuation time, consumption of oxygen during sample storage by passivation treatment on sample tubes, and fractionation of isotopic ratios with long homogenization time for splitting. Precisions are assessed by analysing standard gases with artificial ice, and by duplicate measurements of the Dome Fuji and NEEM ice cores. The overall reproducibility (one standard deviation) from duplicate ice-core analyses are 3.2 ppb, 2.2 ppb and 3.1 ppm for CH4, N2O and CO2 concentrations, 0.006, 0.010, 0.09 and 0.12 ‰ for δ15N, δ18O, δO2/N2 and δAr/N2, and 0.67 mlSTP kg-1 for total air content, respectively. Our new method successfully combines the high-precision, small-sample and multiple-species measurements, with a wide range of applications for ice-core paleoenvironmental studies.


Author(s):  
C. C. Clawson ◽  
L. W. Anderson ◽  
R. A. Good

Investigations which require electron microscope examination of a few specific areas of non-homogeneous tissues make random sampling of small blocks an inefficient and unrewarding procedure. Therefore, several investigators have devised methods which allow obtaining sample blocks for electron microscopy from region of tissue previously identified by light microscopy of present here techniques which make possible: 1) sampling tissue for electron microscopy from selected areas previously identified by light microscopy of relatively large pieces of tissue; 2) dehydration and embedding large numbers of individually identified blocks while keeping each one separate; 3) a new method of maintaining specific orientation of blocks during embedding; 4) special light microscopic staining or fluorescent procedures and electron microscopy on immediately adjacent small areas of tissue.


1960 ◽  
Vol 23 ◽  
pp. 227-232 ◽  
Author(s):  
P WEST ◽  
G LYLES
Keyword(s):  

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