18O-Equilibration on Water, Fruit Juice and Wine Using Thermo Scientific GasBench II
Applications | 2004 | Thermo Fisher ScientificInstrumentation
The ratio of oxygen isotopes (18O/16O) in water plays a critical role across environmental research, beverage authentication, and metabolic studies. Accurate and precise determination of this isotope ratio supports hydrological cycle investigations, quality control in food and drink industries, and tracing of physiological processes using 18O-labeled compounds.
This work evaluates the performance of the Thermo Scientific GasBench II continuous flow interface for 18O/16O analysis of water, fruit juice, and wine. The main goals are to achieve high precision and accuracy comparable to traditional dual inlet equilibrators, reduce sample size, and streamline sample preparation across diverse matrices.
Sample Preparation and Equilibration:
Water Standards:
Continuous improvements in IRMS sensitivity and interface automation will expand the applicability of CO2/H2O equilibration techniques. Potential developments include:
The GasBench II offers a robust continuous flow solution for high-precision 18O/16O analysis in water, juices, and wines. Its performance matches that of established dual inlet equilibrators while reducing sample size and simplifying preparation, making it a versatile tool for environmental and food-quality applications.
GC/MSD, GC/HRMS
IndustriesEnvironmental, Food & Agriculture
ManufacturerThermo Fisher Scientific
Summary
Importance of the Topic
The ratio of oxygen isotopes (18O/16O) in water plays a critical role across environmental research, beverage authentication, and metabolic studies. Accurate and precise determination of this isotope ratio supports hydrological cycle investigations, quality control in food and drink industries, and tracing of physiological processes using 18O-labeled compounds.
Objectives and Overview of the Study
This work evaluates the performance of the Thermo Scientific GasBench II continuous flow interface for 18O/16O analysis of water, fruit juice, and wine. The main goals are to achieve high precision and accuracy comparable to traditional dual inlet equilibrators, reduce sample size, and streamline sample preparation across diverse matrices.
Methodology and Instrumentation
Sample Preparation and Equilibration:
- 500 μL aliquots of water, fruit juice, or wine placed in borosilicate vials.
- Automated flushing with 0.3–0.5% CO2 in He at 100 mL/min for 5 min to remove residual air.
- Equilibration at 24–28°C for 20–24 h to achieve isotope exchange between CO2 and water (CO2/H2O <1:3000).
- Loop injection of headspace aliquots (10–100 μL) into an isothermal GC for CO2 separation on PoraPLOT Q column.
- Repetitive loop injection (1–2 min per replicate) to approach dual inlet precision.
- VSMOW/VSLAP scaling with two reference waters per batch (scaling factors ~0.9946–1.0024).
- Thermo Scientific GasBench II continuous flow interface with autosampler-assisted loop injection.
- Thermo Scientific DELTA V Advantage, DELTA V Plus, MAT 253 and MAT 252 IRMS.
- Thermo Scientific HDO II dual inlet water equilibrator (benchmark system).
Key Results and Discussion
Water Standards:
- Comparison with HDO II shows offsets of 0.03–0.04‰ for three natural water standards, confirming accuracy.
- Average external precision better than 0.05‰ and no detectable memory effects, even for very depleted Antarctic water.
- Analysis of apple, orange, mineral, and local drinking waters reveals clear isotopic differences, enabling detection of juice reconstitution from concentrate.
- External precision below 0.06‰ on replicate analyses.
- Direct analysis of natural CO2 in wine yields 18O values consistent with HDO II within 0.02–0.03‰.
- Omission of added CO2 for equilibration demonstrated with precision of ±0.035‰.
Benefits and Practical Applications
- High precision and accuracy comparable to dual inlet systems with reduced sample volume (<200 μL).
- High throughput via automated loop injection and continuous flow design.
- Versatile application to water, juices, wines, and potentially other water-bearing substrates.
- Absence of memory effects ensures data integrity across diverse isotope compositions.
- Potential to simplify workflows by using native CO2 in beverages.
Future Trends and Opportunities
Continuous improvements in IRMS sensitivity and interface automation will expand the applicability of CO2/H2O equilibration techniques. Potential developments include:
- Full automation of sample handling and equilibration for high-throughput laboratories.
- Integration of native headspace gases to eliminate reagent addition.
- Extension to multi-isotope analysis and coupling with chromatographic separation of other volatiles.
- Broader use in climate reconstruction, forensic authentication, and metabolic tracer studies.
Conclusion
The GasBench II offers a robust continuous flow solution for high-precision 18O/16O analysis in water, juices, and wines. Its performance matches that of established dual inlet equilibrators while reducing sample size and simplifying preparation, making it a versatile tool for environmental and food-quality applications.
Reference
- Stephen T. Nelson, Rapid Commun. Mass Spectrom. 14, 1044-1046 (2000).
- Stephen T. Nelson, Rapid Commun. Mass Spectrom. 14, 293-297 (2000).
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