REY distribution and concentration in bottom seawater and oxic pore water in the CCZ, NE Pacific: pilot study on the application of a DGT passive sampling method in deep sea environments

Author(s):  
Katja Schmidt ◽  
Sophie Anna Luise Paul ◽  
Cornelia Kriete

<p>Sampling and analysis of trace elements in open seawater and in sediment pore water in the deep sea is challenging due to small sample volumes and matrix effects. Here we evaluate an alternative method using the technique of diffusive gradients in thin films (DGT passive samplers), focussing on rare earth elements and yttrium (REY). DGT measures the labile fraction of metals in situ by fixing them on a Chelex resin after diffusion through a gel layer, providing a diffusive flux and averaged in situ concentrations of elements during the time of deployment. As the accumulated element concentrations increase with exposure time to solution, long-term deployment times overcome low trace metal concentrations in seawater and pore water. So far, no deep-sea applications of passive samplers are yet reported.</p><p>Sampling was performed in bottom seawater and surface sediments in the German licence area for manganese nodule exploration in the Clarion Clipperton Zone (CCZ, research cruise SO268 in April/May 2019), deployment times ranged from 12 hours in sediments to 4 weeks in open seawater.</p><p>Seawater DGT’s were deployed 0.5 m to 8 m above the seafloor. PAAS-normalized REY show the typical seawater pattern, with increase from LREE to HREE, a strong negative Ce anomaly, a kink from Gd to Tb, and a pronounced positive Y/Ho anomaly. The pattern and calculated concentrations agree very well with reported dissolved REY (<0.2 µm) for Pacific deep water (Alibo and Nozaki, 1999). Sediment DGT sticks were deployed in cores taken with a multicorer and cover the first 15 cm of the sediment. They provide in situ high-resolution profiles of trace metal fluxes and were analysed in 0.5 cm to 2 cm segments. We observe smooth PAAS-normalized patterns with negative Ce anomaly, an increase from LREE to MREE, and a slight decrease from Tb to Lu, sometimes accompanied by a small positive Y/Ho anomaly. The calculated concentrations generally increase with depth. Paul et al (2019) previously described very similar distribution patterns for CCZ sediment pore water and suggested Mn and Fe phases as the REY source. The pore water REY patterns clearly differ from bottom seawater already in the first centimetres of surface sediment– this sharp shift demonstrates that the dissolved pore water REY pool in the sediment surface is controlled by fluid-mineral equilibria.</p><p>The DGT passive sampling method may provide an additional tool to investigate biogeochemical processes at the deep-sea sediment-water interface and in the open ocean, and to monitor effects of anthropogenic disturbances at the seafloor on benthic trace element fluxes. We will discuss uncertainties of concentration calculation resulting from diffusion coefficients and from non-steady state conditions in pore water, and the comparability of DGT-derived distribution pattern and concentrations with results from physically filtered water. The DGT labile fraction is thought to represent the bioavailable fraction of trace elements and may also include colloids and nanoparticles (NPCs).</p><p> </p><p>Alibo and Nozaki, 1999: Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 63, pp. 363-372.</p><p>Paul et al, 2019: Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 251, pp. 56-72.</p>

2015 ◽  
Vol 101 (1) ◽  
pp. 296-303 ◽  
Author(s):  
Susann-Cathrin Lang ◽  
Andrew Hursthouse ◽  
Philipp Mayer ◽  
Danjiela Kötke ◽  
Ines Hand ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Lei Yao ◽  
Alan D. Steinman ◽  
Xiang Wan ◽  
Xiubo Shu ◽  
Liqiang Xie

AbstractThe passive sampling method of diffusive gradients in thin-films (DGT) was developed to provide a quantitative and time-integrated measurement of microcystin-LR (MC-LR) in waters. The DGT method in this study used HLB (hydrophilic-lipophilic-balanced) material as a binding agent, and methanol as an eluent. The diffusion coefficient of MC-LR was 5.01 × 10−6 cm2 s−1 at 25 °C in 0.45 mm thick diffusion layer. This DGT method had a binding capacity of 4.24 μg per binding gel disk (3.14 cm2), ensuring sufficient capacity to measure MC-LR in most water matrices. The detection limit of HLB DGT was 0.48 ng L−1. DGT coupled to analysis by HPLC appears to be an accurate method for MC-LR monitoring. Comparison of DGT measurements for MC-LR in water and a conventional active sampling method showed little difference. This study demonstrates that HLB-based DGT is a useful tool for in situ monitoring of MC-LR in fresh waters.


2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 133-141 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chengrong Guo ◽  
Mingjie Ma ◽  
Dongxing Yuan ◽  
Yongming Huang ◽  
Kunning Lin ◽  
...  

A novel sensor system, which integrated sampling, enrichment, and in situ measurement of dissolved Fe(ii) in sediment pore water, was developed.


1984 ◽  
Vol 41 (2) ◽  
pp. 286-293 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert B. Cook

In the anoxic hypolimnion of Lake 227, Experimental Lakes Area, northwestern Ontario, ΣH2S exhibits a mid-depth maximum, while Fe2+ increases with depth. At the mid-depth ΣH2S maximum and below, saturation with respect to amorphous FeS is reached, and the concentration of ΣH2S is limited by the high Fe2+ concentrations, in accord with the FeS solubility product. Values for pKsp[Formula: see text] for FeS determined from the ΣH2S maximum and below averaged 3.16 in 1979 and agree well with other in situ and laboratory measurements. In the top 10 cm of sediment, pore water ΣH2S and Fe2+ are in equilibrium with amorphous FeS. Analyses of cores confirms the existence of an iron sulfide phase. Fe2+, which is produced in the pore water from the decomposition of organic matter, increases to concentrations at which siderite may form, although the presence of siderite has not been verified. Comparison of calculated pore water fluxes of Fe2+ with the observed increase of Fe2+ in the anoxic hypolimnion reveals that about 90% of the observed flux originates at the sediment–water interface, while the remainder is derived from pore water flux.


2018 ◽  
Vol 29 ◽  
pp. 1-11
Author(s):  
Muswerry Muchtar

Effect of two sampling techniques (i.e. corer and sipper samplers) of sediment pore water on measured concentrations of phosphate, nitrate and ammonia was examined. The concentrations of nitrate and ammonia in relation to sediment depth (vertical variations) collected by corer and sipper sampler do not show significant differences, while for phosphate concentrations significant differences occurred. The advantages   and disadvantages of both techniques are discussed.


ACS Omega ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 5 (49) ◽  
pp. 31551-31558
Author(s):  
Mingjie Ma ◽  
Honghui Wang ◽  
Jin Xu ◽  
Yongming Huang ◽  
Dongxing Yuan ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Andrea Davies

<p>Ferromanganese nodules are authigenic marine sediments that form over millions of years from the precipitation of Fe oxyhydroxides and Mn oxides from seawater (hydrogenetic-type growth) and sediment pore-water (diagenetic-type growth). Fe-Mn (oxyhydr)oxides grow in layers about nuclei, effectively scavenging minor metals such as Ni, Cu and Co from the waters they grow in. The uptake of different elements into the ferromanganese nodules reflects their environment and mechanism of growth, and these deposits are of interest both as a potential source of metals of economic interest, and as records of changing ocean conditions. This study investigates the composition of 77 ferromanganese nodules from the seafloor around New Zealand. Samples analysed come from locations several thousand kilometres apart under the same water mass (Lower Circumpolar Deep Water – LCDW), but with varying depth, current velocity, and sediment type. The outermost 1 mm rim of each nodule, representing near-modern growth, was sampled to compare with modern environmental parameters including substrate sediment composition and chemical and physical oceanography. Major, minor, and trace element analysis of nodule rims were undertaken, and the authigenic and detrital components examined via leaching experiments to evaluate their relative influence on growth mechanisms. Overall, New Zealand ferromanganese nodules are hydrogenetic in origin. However, there are systematic variations in composition that reflect variable diagenetic influence. Hydrogenetic endmember compositions are defined by samples from two localities in the Southern Ocean that have no evidence for diagenetic influence. Diagenetic influence on nodule composition is exemplified by samples from the two locations in the Tasman Sea, but also include nodules from the Campbell nodule field. Nodules from the Campbell nodule field come from two transects perpendicular to the Campbell Plateau, and the Deep Western Boundary Current (DWBC). Both sediment composition and nodule rim chemistry vary systematically across both transects. Areas closest to the slope have sediment profiles indicating high energy, erosive environments, continental-sourced sand components, and are dominated by nodules with hydrogenetic chemical characteristics similar to those of the Southern Ocean. Further from the slope, the sediment profiles indicate silt dominated sediments of a more oceanic crustal provenance, lower energy environment, and increased influence of oxic diagenetic processes on the major, minor and trace element profiles of the nodules. No hydrothermal contribution was identified in the chemistry of any of the nodules analysed. The physical and chemical properties of the sediment, along with current velocities, were found to be the key influences in diagenetic enrichment in the nodules. The influence of seawater chemistry was difficult to determine due to the lack of direct analyses in the area. Ferromanganese nodule chemistry is a function of the nodule environment, including water body, sediment composition and depth. The authigenic components of nodules can therefore be used to investigate the deep-sea environment. The redox conditions of sediments and the productivity of the overlying water will affect the trace metal constituents of the pore-waters of a sediment (Kuhn et al., 2017). Sediments with a larger fraction of labile organic matter may result in trace element enrichment of the pore-water. Sediments below the CCD will be higher in trace elements than sediments below the CCD (U1413, U1406B, U1402, U1398, U1398, and U1378) due to carbonate matter acting as a dilutant that can limit the supply of trace elements mobilised in the pore-water during diagenesis (Glasby, 2006). Terrigenous clasts such as quartz (Chester, 1990), will also reduce trace element enrichment in the pore-water due to their low reactivity, e.g. for the sediment U1406B, which has a high lithic component (Table 3.2). Sediments with a higher biogenic silica component (such as U1373, U1374, and U1378) (Table 3.2, Table 3.4) are predicted to produce nodules with higher trace element contents (ISA, 2010). In contrast to both the CCZ and Indian Ocean nodules, the Campbell nodule field samples formed above the CCD, and hence in sediments that include a significant carbonate component. This minimises the trace element pore-water enrichment and can account for the lower Cu+Ni+Co contents observed in the Campbell nodule field nodules compared with those that formed below the CCD (CCZ and Indian Ocean).</p>


2013 ◽  
Vol 10 (11) ◽  
pp. 13293-13331 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. H. M. Volkmann ◽  
M. Weiler

Abstract. The stable isotope signature of pore water provides an integral fingerprint of water origin, flow path, transport processes, and residence times and can thus serve as a powerful tracer of hydrological processes in the unsaturated and saturated zone. However, the full potential of stable isotopes to quantitatively characterize subsurface water dynamics is yet unfolded due to the difficulty in obtaining extensive detailed and continual measurements of spatiotemporally variable pore water signatures. With the development of field-deployable laser-based isotope analyzers, such measurements are now becoming feasible. This study presents the development and application of a functional, automatable, and cost-efficient system for non-destructive continual in-situ monitoring of pore water stable isotope signatures with high resolution. The monitoring system uses automatic-controllable valve arrays to continuously extract diluted soil air water vapor via a branching network of multiple small microporous probes into a commercial isotope analyzer. Soil temperature observations are used to convert obtained vapor phase into liquid phase water isotope signatures, but these can also be obtained based on vapor concentration measurements. In-situ sampling was conducted at six depths for each of three plots planted with varying vegetation on an experimental site in SW Germany. Two different methods based on advective and diffusive soil water vapor probing were employed suitable under unsaturated and all (including saturated) moisture conditions, respectively. The advective sampling method was applied using multiple permanently installed probes (continual mode) and using a single probe subsequently inserted to sample the various locations (push-in mode), while the diffusive sampling method was applied in push-in mode only. Using a specific identical treatment onsite calibration approach along with basic corrections for instrument bias and temperature dependent free water-vapor isotopic equilibrium fractionation, the monitoring system facilitated inference of normalized liquid pore water isotopic composition with sufficiently high accuracy and precision at sampling intervals of less than four minutes and resolved the isotopic variability along natural depth profiles. Comparison indicated that the presented in-situ approaches may be used interchangeably with each other and with concurrent laboratory-based direct equilibration measurements of destructively collected samples, such that the choice of method will depend upon the task and anticipated conditions of sampling. The introduced sampling techniques provide powerful tools towards a detailed quantitative understanding of dynamic and heterogeneous shallow subsurface and vadose zone processes.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document