File(s) | Type | Description | Action |
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rpo_thermograms.csv (4.42 MB) | Comma Separated Values (.csv) | Ramped Pyrolysis Oxidation (RPO) thermogram data of samples from Station M. | Download |
The >5000-year radiocarbon age (14C-age) of much of the 630±30 Pg C oceanic dissolved organic carbon (DOC) reservoir remains an enigma in the marine carbon cycle. The fact that DOC is significantly older than dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) at every depth in the ocean forms the basis of our current framing of the marine DOC cycle where some component persists over multiple cycles of ocean mixing. As a result, 14C-depleted, aged DOC is hypothesized to be present as a uniform reservoir with a con...
Show moreSample collection
Samples were collected during a cruise aboard the R/V Western Flyer to Station M off the coast of central California in April 2018 (34° 50’N, 123° 00’W; 4100 meters depth). 30 to 40 Liters of seawater were collected at five depths ranging from 45 to 3700 meters. Water was acidified to pH 2 using trace metal grade hydrochloric acid (HCl) and extracted using 1 g PPL cartridges (Bond Elut, Agilent). A fraction of the extracted PPL-DOC sample was dried extensively to remove methanol and then subjected to a 2 M acid hydrolysis.
Field collection of samples
Samples were collected during a cruise aboard the R/V Western Flyer to Station M off the coast of central California in April 2018 (34° 50’N, 123° 00’W; 4100 meters depth). 30 to 40 Liters of seawater were collected at five depths ranging from 45 to 3700 meters. Water was then acidified to pH 2 using trace metal grade hydrochloric acid (HCl). Solid phase extraction columns (1g Bond Elut PPL cartridges by Agilent) were first activated overnight with liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry (LC/MS) grade methanol and then rinsed with LC/MS grade water, LC/MS grade methanol, and LC/MS grade water adjusted to pH 2 using trace metal grade HCl. The acidified seawater was passed through the PPL cartridges under gravitational pressure over 1-2 days. This PPL solid phase extraction method has been used extensively to isolate marine DOM (Dittmar et al., 2008; Petras et al., 2017 and more) and provides yields of 35-60%. Following acidification, the method preferentially extracts hydrophobic compounds but is also able to isolate some semi-polar compounds (Johnson et al., 2017; Petras et al., 2021) whose overall concentrations may change with depth. In addition to the relatively high yield, previous work has shown that Δ14C of PPL-DOC is similar to that of the bulk (Lechtenfeld et al., 2014; Lewis et al., 2021). Typically, 5L of seawater was extracted with one 1g PPL cartridge.
Before eluting the PPL resin, and immediately following the extraction, the cartridge was rinsed with three column volumes of pH 2 LC/MS grade water and dried under ultra-high purity nitrogen gas. Organic matter retained on the cartridge was then eluted with 10 mL of methanol/1 g PPL cartridge (PPL-DOC) and stored at -20 °C. Seawater for total organic carbon concentration [TOC] and dissolved organic carbon concentration [DOC] analysis (i.e., seawater pre-filtered through combusted Whatman corporation GF/F filters) was collected into combusted 40-mL borosilicate vials, immediately acidified to pH 2 using trace metal grade 12 N HCl (Fisher Scientific), capped with acid-washed vial caps with septa, and stored at room temperature until measurement. *[Which of these steps captures the PPL DOM that is referenced in the data table?]*
A fraction of the extracted PPL-DOC sample was dried extensively to remove methanol and then subjected to a 2 M acid hydrolysis. Briefly, the organic matter was transferred to an ampoule with 2 mL of 2 M hydrochloric acid and sealed under a nitrogen atmosphere before being placed in a drying oven at 80°C for 18 hours. Following hydrolysis, the sample was diluted with LC/MS grade water to pH 2 and then re-extracted onto a PPL cartridge as described above. The organic matter retained by the cartridge was then eluted in methanol and dried down for frozen storage.
Laboratory sampling
Ramped pyrolysis/oxidation (RPO) procedure was performed at the National Ocean Sciences Accelerator Mass Spectrometry (NOSAMS) facility in Woods Hole, MA, USA. Samples were transferred while dissolved in a small amount of methanol into quartz cups (pre-combusted at 850°C, 1 hour) and then dried down under ultra-high purity nitrogen gas. Samples were further dried in an oven at 50°C for multiple days in an attempt to remove all methanol. Each quartz cup containing a single sample was then placed inside the RPO reactor via a quartz insert tube. The RPO instrument continuously heats the sample at a set rate, monitors evolved CO2 during the pyrolysis/oxidation reactions as “thermograms” (Rosenheim et al., 2008), and can be used to trap CO2 for isotope analysis.
The RPO methodology has been described previously and further information describing the detailed protocol can be found in other publications (Hemingway et al., 2017; Rosenheim et al., 2008). In summary, all samples were operated in oxidation mode (carrier gas 92% He, 8% O2) with a flow rate of 35 mL min−1 and a ramp rate of either 20 or 5 °C min−1. Samples analyzed at 20°C min−1 ranged in size from 6.4 to 36.8 µmol C and all resulting CO2 was collected for isotope analysis. Samples analyzed at 5°C min−1 ranged in size from 48.2 to 185.2 µmol C, where these amounts represent the sums of six fractions collected during each 5°C min−1 ramp, with each fraction ranging in size from 4.4 to 43.6 µmol C. In total we ran ten 20°C min−1 ramps and six 5°C min−1 ramps of samples from Station M.
White, M. E., Nguyen, T., Koester, I., Lardie Gaylord, M., Beman, J. M., Smith, K., McNichol, A., Beaupré, S. R., Aluwihare, L. (2023) Ramped pyrolysis oxidation (RPO) thermogram data of DOC from water samples collected during R/V Western Flyer Benthic-Pelagic Coupling expedition to Station M in the eastern Pacific Ocean in April 2018. Biological and Chemical Oceanography Data Management Office (BCO-DMO). (Version 1) Version Date 2023-03-24 [if applicable, indicate subset used]. doi:10.26008/1912/bco-dmo.892564.1 [access date]
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