Litcius/Paper detail

Development and Re‐Evaluation of Tourmaline Reference Materials for <i>In Situ</i> Measurement of Boron δ Values by Secondary Ion Mass Spectrometry

Katharina Marger, Matthieu Harlaux, Andrea Rielli, Lukas P. Baumgartner, Andréa Dini, Bárbara L. Dutrow, Anne‐Sophie Bouvier

2020Geostandards and Geoanalytical Research20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Six tourmaline samples were investigated as potential reference materials (RMs) for boron isotope measurement by secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS). The tourmaline samples are chemically homogeneous and cover a compositional range of tourmaline supergroup minerals (primarily Fe, Mg and Li end‐members). Additionally, they have homogeneous boron delta values with intermediate precision values during SIMS analyses of less than 0.6‰ (2 s ). These samples were compared with four established tourmaline RMs, that is, schorl IAEA‐B‐4 and three Harvard tourmalines (schorl HS#112566, dravite HS#108796 and elbaite HS#98144). They were re‐evaluated for their major element and boron delta values using the same measurement procedure as the new tourmaline samples investigated. A discrepancy of about 1.5‰ in δ 11 B was found between the previously published reference values for established RMs and the values determined in this study. Significant instrumental mass fractionation (IMF) of up to 8‰ in δ 11 B was observed for schorl–dravite–elbaite solid solutions during SIMS analysis. Using the new reference values determined in this study, the IMF of the ten tourmaline samples can be modelled by a linear combination of the chemical parameters FeO + MnO, SiO 2 and F. The new tourmaline RMs, together with the four established RMs, extend the boron isotope analysis of tourmaline towards the Mg‐ and Al‐rich compositional range. Consequently, the in situ boron isotope ratio of many natural tourmalines can now be determined with an uncertainty of less than 0.8‰ (2 s ).

Topics & Concepts

TourmalineBoronAnalytical Chemistry (journal)Isotopes of boronIsotopeChemistryMineralogyMass spectrometryHomogeneousGeologyGeochemistryEnvironmental chemistryChromatographyNuclear physicsPhysicsOrganic chemistryThermodynamicsGeological and Geochemical AnalysisRadioactive element chemistry and processingearthquake and tectonic studies
Development and Re‐Evaluation of Tourmaline Reference Materials for <i>In Situ</i> Measurement of Boron δ Values by Secondary Ion Mass Spectrometry | Litcius