Determination of Osmium Concentration and Isotope Composition at Ultra-low Level in Polar Ice and Snow.

Title Determination of Osmium Concentration and Isotope Composition at Ultra-low Level in Polar Ice and Snow.
Authors J.H. Seo; M. Sharma; E.C. Osterberg; B.P. Jackson
Journal Anal Chem
DOI 10.1021/acs.analchem.8b00150
Abstract

Here we use two chemical separation procedures to determine exceptionally low Os concentrations (?10 g g) and Os isotopic composition in polar snow/ice. Approximately 50 g of meltwater is spiked with Os tracer solution and frozen at -20 °C in quartz-glass ampules. A mixture of HO and HNO is then added, and the sample is heated to 300 °C at 100 bar. This allows tracer Os to be equilibrated with the sample as all Os species are oxidized to OsO. The resulting OsO is separated using either distillation (Method-I) or solvent-extraction (Method-II), purified, and measured using negative thermal ionization mass spectrometry (N-TIMS). A new technique is presented that minimizes Re and Os blanks of the Pt filaments used in N-TIMS. We analyze snow collected from Summit, Greenland during 2009, 2014, and 2017. We find that the average Os concentration of the snow is 0.459 ± 0.018 (95% C.I.) fg g corresponding to an Os flux of 0.0579 ± 0.0023 (95% C.I.) fmol cm yr. The average R(Os/Os) ratio of the Summit snow is 0.264 ± 0.026 (95% C.I.). Assuming that the volcanic source is negligible, the average ratio indicates that about 0.0518 ± 0.0040 (95% C.I.) fmol cm yr of Os is of cosmic derivation, corresponding to an accretion rate of extra-terrestrial Os to the Earth of 264 ± 21 mol yr.

Citation J.H. Seo; M. Sharma; E.C. Osterberg; B.P. Jackson.Determination of Osmium Concentration and Isotope Composition at Ultra-low Level in Polar Ice and Snow.. Anal Chem. 2018;90(9):57815787. doi:10.1021/acs.analchem.8b00150

Related Elements

Osmium

See more Osmium products. Osmium (atomic symbol: Os, atomic number: 76) is a Block D, Group 8, Period 6 element with an atomic weight of 190.23. Osmium Bohr ModelThe number of electrons in each of osmium's shells is [2, 8, 18, 32, 14, 2] and its electron configuration is [Xe] 4f14 5d6 6s2. The osmium atom has a radius of 135 pm and a Van der Waals radius of 216 pm. Osmium was discovered and first isolated by Smithson Tennant in 1803. Elemental OsmiumIn its elemental form, osmium has a silvery blue cast apperance. Osmium has the highest melting point and the lowest vapor pressure of any of the platinum group of metals it is also the densest naturally ocurring element. Osmium is the least abundant stable element in the earth's crust. It is found in the alloys osmiridium and iridiosmium and as a free element. The origin of the name Osmium comes from the Greek word osme, meaning a smell or odor.

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