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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2014-01-27
    Description: A detailed investigation into the performance of two flow injection-chemiluminescence (FI-CL) manifolds (with and without a preconcentration column) for the determination of sub-nanomolar dissolved iron (Fe(II) + Fe(III)), following the reduction of Fe(III) by sulphite, in seawater is described. Kinetic experiments were conducted to examine the efficiency of reduction of inorganic Fe(III) with sulphite under different conditions and a rigorous study of the potential interference caused by other transition metals present in seawater was conducted. Using 100 μM concentrations of sulphite a reduction time of 4 h was sufficient to quantitatively reduce Fe(III) in seawater. Under optimal conditions, cobalt(II) and vanadium(IV)/(III) were the major positive interferences and strategies for their removal are reported. Specifically, cobalt(II) was masked by the addition of dimethylglyoxime to the luminol solution and vanadium(IV) was removed by passing the sample through an 8-hydroxyquinoline column in a low pH carrier stream. Manganese(II) also interfered by suppression of the CL response but this was not significant at typical open ocean concentrations. © 2009 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2020-07-27
    Description: The marine biogeochemistries of carbon and nitrogen have come under increased scrutiny because of their close involvement in climate change and coastal eutrophication. Recent studies have shown that the high-temperature combustion (HTC) technique is suitable for routine analyses of dissolved organic matter due to its good oxidation efficiency, high sensitivity, and precision. In our laboratory, a coupled HTC TOC-NCD system with a sample changer was used for the automated and simultaneous determination of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) and total dissolved nitrogen (TDN)in seawater samples. TOC control software was used for TOC instrument control, DOC data acquisition, and data analysis. TDN data acquisition and manipulation was undertaken under LabVIEW. The combined system allowed simultaneous determination of DOC and TDN in the same sample using a single injection and provided low detection limits and excellent linear ranges for both DOC and TDN. The risk of contamination has been remarkably reduced due to the minimal sample manipulation and automated analyses. The optimised system provided a reliable tool for the routine determination of DOC and TDN in marine waters. © 2005 Hindawi Publishing Corporation.
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2014-02-04
    Description: The effects of dissolved organic compounds on the determination of nanomolar concentrations of Fe(II) have been compared using two luminol-based flow injection chemiluminescence (FI-CL) methods. One used the direct injection of sample into the luminol reagent stream, and the other incorporated on-line solid-phase extraction of the analyte on an 8-hydroxyquinoline microcolumn. The CL signals from analyses of dissolved iron species (Fe(II) and Fe(III)) with model ligands and organic compounds were examined in high-purity water and seawater. The organic compounds included natural reducing agents (e.g., ascorbic acid), nitrogen σ-donor/π-acceptor compounds (e.g., 1,4-dipyridine, protoporphyrin IX), aromatic compounds (e.g., 1,4-dihydroxybenzene), synthetic iron chelators (e.g., EDTA), and natural iron binding compounds (e.g., desferrioxamine B, ferrichrome A). Fe(II) determinations for both luminol FI-CL methods were affected by submicromolar concentrations of redox-active compounds, strong iron binding ligands (i.e., log KFeL > 6), and compounds with electron-donating functional groups in both high-purity water and seawater. This was due to reactions between organic molecules and iron species before and during analysis, rather than chemiluminescence caused by the individual organic compounds. In addition, the effects of strong ligands and size speciation on Fe(II) recoveries from seawater following acidification (pH 2) and reduction (100 μM sodium sulfite) were investigated. © 2005 American Chemical Society.
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  • 4
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    ASLO (Association for the Sciences of Limnology and Oceanography)
    In:  Limnology and Oceanography, 52 (6). pp. 2530-2539.
    Publication Date: 2014-01-30
    Description: To investigate the biogeochemistry of iron in the waters of the European continental margin, we determined the dissolved iron distribution and redox speciation in filtered (〈0.2 μm) open-ocean and shelf waters. Depth profiles were sampled over the shelf slope southeast of the Chapelle Bank area (47.61°N, 4.24°W to 46.00°N, 8.01°W) and a horizontal surface-water transect over the shelf and through the English Channel (la Manche) and the southern North Sea (46°N, 8°W to 52°N, 4°E). An abrupt trace-metal front was found near the shelf slope, indicated by a horizontal gradient of dissolved iron (DFe) and aluminium (DAl), which correlated with changing salinities (r2 = 0.572 and 0.528, respectively, n = 92). Labile Fe(II) concentrations varied from 〈12 pmol L-1 in North Atlantic surface waters to >200 pmol L-1 in the near bottom waters of the shelf break. Labile Fe(II) accounted for ∼5 of the dissolved iron species in surface shelf waters (mean 5.0 ± 2.7), whereas higher Fe(II) fractions (i.e., >8) were observed near the sea bottom on the shelf break and during a midday solar maximum in surface waters in the vicinity of the Scheldt river plume. Benthic processes (resuspension and diagenesis) constituted important sources of Fe(II) and DFe in this region, and photoreduction of Fe(III) species in shelf waters caused enhanced labile Fe(II) concentrations. These processes increased the lability of iron and its potential availability to marine organisms in the shelf ecosystem. © 2007, by the American Society of Limnology and Oceanography, Inc.
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2020-07-27
    Description: A flow-injection (FI)-based instrument under Lab VIEW control for monitoring iron in marine waters is described. The instrument incorporates a miniature, low-power photomultiplier tube (PMT), and a number of microelectric and solenoid actuated valves and peristaltic pumps. The software allows full control of all flow injection components and processing of the data from the PMT. The optimised system is capable of 20 injections per hour, including preconcentration and wash steps. The detection limit (3 sd of the blank) is 21 pM at sea and the linear range is 21-2000 pM with a 60-second sample load time. Typical precision between replicate FI peaks is 5.9 ± 3.2 (n = 4) over the linear range. © 2005 Hindawi Publishing Corporation.
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2014-02-03
    Description: The first large-scale international intercomparison of analytical methods for the determination of dissolved iron in seawater was carried out between October 2000 and December 2002. The exercise was conducted as a rigorously "blind" comparison of 7 analytical techniques by 24 international laboratories. The comparison was based on a large volume (700 L), filtered surface seawater sample collected from the South Atlantic Ocean (the "IRONAGES" sample), which was acidified, mixed and bottled at sea. Two 1-L sample bottles were sent to each participant. Integrity and blindness were achieved by having the experiment designed and carried out by a small team, and overseen by an independent data manager. Storage, homogeneity and time-series stability experiments conducted over 2.5 years showed that inter-bottle variability of the IRONAGES sample was good (〈 7), although there was a decrease in iron concentration in the bottles over time (0.8-0.5 nM) before a stable value was observed. This raises questions over the suitability of sample acidification and storage. For the complete dataset of 45 results (after excluding 3 outliers not passing the screening criteria), the mean concentration of dissolved iron in the IRONAGES sample was 0.59 ± 0.21 nM, representing a coefficient of variation (CV) for analytical comparability ("community precision") of 36 (1s), a significant improvement over earlier exercises. Within-run precision (5-10), inter-run precision (15) and inter-bottle homogeneity (〈 7) were much better than overall analytical comparability, implying the presence of: (1) random variability (inherent to all intercomparison exercises); (2) errors in quantification of the analytical blank; and (3) systematic inter-method variability, perhaps related to secondary sample treatment (e.g. measurement of different physicochemical fractions of iron present in seawater) in the community dataset. By grouping all results for the same method, analyses performed using flow injection-luminol chemiluminescence (with FeII detection after sample reduction) Bowie, A.R., Achterberg, E.P., Mantoura, R.F.C., Worsfold, P.J., 1998. Determination of sub-nanomolar levels of iron in seawater using flow injection with chemiluminescence detection. Anal. Chim. Acta 361, 189-200 and flow injection-catalytic spectrophotometry (using the reagent DPD) Measures, C.I., Yuan, J., Resing, J.A., 1995. Determination of iron in seawater by flow injection analysis using in-line preconcentration and spectrophotometric detection. Mar. Chem. 50, 3-12 gave significantly (P = 0.05) higher dissolved iron concentrations than analyses performed using isotope dilution ICPMS Wu, J.F., Boyle, E.A., 1998. Determination of iron in seawater by high-resolution isotope dilution inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry after Mg(OH) 2 co-precipitation. Anal. Chim. Acta 367, 183-191. There was, however, evidence of scatter within each method group (CV up to 59%), implying that better uniformity in procedures may be required. This paper does not identify individual data and should not be viewed as an evaluation of single laboratories. Rather it summarises the status of dissolved iron analysis in seawater by the international community at the start of the 21st century, and can be used to inform future exercises including the SAFE iron intercomparison study in the North Pacific in October 2004. © 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2017-10-24
    Description: Siderophores are chelates produced by bacteria as part of a highly specific iron uptake mechanism. They are thought to be important in the bacterial acquisition of iron in seawater and to influence iron biogeochemistry in the ocean. We have identified and quantified two types of siderophores in seawater samples collected from the Atlantic Ocean. These siderophores were identified as hydroxamate siderophores, both ferrioxamine species representative of the more soluble marine siderophores characterized to date. Ferrioxamine G was widely distributed in surface waters throughout the Atlantic Ocean, while ferrioxamine E had a more varied distribution. Total concentrations of the two siderophores were between 3 and 20 pM in the euphotic zone. If these compounds are fully complexed in seawater, they represent approximately 0.2-4.6 of the 〈0.2 μm iron pool. Our data confirm that siderophore-mediated iron acquisition is important for marine heterotrophic bacteria and indicate that siderophores play an important role in the oceanic biogeochemical cycling of iron. © 2008 American Chemical Society.
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2014-02-03
    Description: Total filterable and colloidal metals were measured in the Tamar Estuary. The colloidal fraction (Mc) was highly variable for each metal, both spatially and temporally. In April 2001, Alc and Coc were higher in the river than the estuary, Cdc, Crc and Pb c were lower, and Mnc and Uc were similar. In September 2001, Cdc was higher in the river than the estuary. Colloidal Al and Mn were positively correlated with concentrations of suspended particles, whereas the colloid contents of the other metals were primarily determined by additional factors. The effect of the colloidal metal content on resultant metal filtrate concentrations, as a function of sample volume filtered, was examined. The amount of Al, Cd, Cu, Pb, and U in the filtrate decreased significantly in at least one case, whereas Mn initially increased in some cases. There was no change for Co, Cr, and Zn. The implications of these results for the study of trace metals in moderately turbid estuaries are discussed. © CSIRO 2006.
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2017-10-24
    Description: The behaviour of a series of hydroxamate siderophores - microbially produced iron complexes - was investigated using electrospray ionisation mass spectrometry (ESI-MS). Three groups of iron hydroxamate siderophores, namely the ferrioxamines, ferrichromes and coprogens/ fusigens, were separated by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) prior to ESI and MS2 fragmentation. For the majority of the siderophores, both protonated molecules and sodium adducts were observed. The most abundant ion was selected for collision-induced fragmentation. Potential fragmentation mechanisms are postulated and discussed. Fragmentation patterns differed between siderophore groups; however, common fragmentation patterns were observed for siderophore ions within the groups examined. Cleavage frequently occurred at carbon-nitrogen or carbon-oxygen bonds. Fragmentation of the ions also involved cleavage of iron-oxygen bonds and transfer of the charge to iron.
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  • 10
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    American Society of Limnology and Oceanography
    In:  Limnology and Oceanography: Methods, 7 . pp. 706-715.
    Publication Date: 2014-01-30
    Description: Little is known about the biological production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) such as H2O2 and O2- in the surface waters of the oceans. This article describes two flow injection-chemiluminescence methods to measure H2O2 and O2- production by marine diatoms. These methods each incorporated a polycarbonate filter unit in which live cells were immobilized, followed by downstream determination of H2O2 and O2- in the cell filtrate. The sample analysis rate was ~1 min-1 for H2O2 and continuous for O2- during assays with diatom cells. The respective detection limits for each system were 1.9 nM (H2O2) and 1.6 nM (O2-). An initial examination of the effect of changing light intensity showed that a rapid light-induced production of both O2- and H2O2 by T. weissflogii cells could be readily detected. Moreover, this production was proportional to the biomass present on the flushed filter. These methods enable the monitoring of real-time fluctuations of biological ROS production in response to changing environmental conditions, and therefore facilitate analysis of the biotic component of ROS production and the subsequent impacts on chemical speciation of nutrients and trace metals in aquatic ecosystems. © 2009, by the American Society of Limnology and Oceanography, Inc.
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