17 resultados para IONIZATION-MASS-SPECTROMETRY
em ArchiMeD - Elektronische Publikationen der Universität Mainz - Alemanha
Resumo:
Within this PhD thesis matrix assisted laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometry (MALDI-MS) has been used as a reliable tool for the quantitative characterization of giant molecules, such as alkyl substituted and unsubstituted large polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH), which cannot be characterized by conventional analytic techniques due to their lack of solubility. The use of the MALDI solvent-free technique for the sample preparation and the application of the standard addition method have allowed the quantitative characterization of synthetic PAH mixtures. The knowledge, acquired by studying these representative systems, has been then transferred to the quantitative analyses of complex and slightly soluble natural PAH mixtures, such as mesophase pitch. Moreover, the possibility to ionize intractable and insoluble molecules via mass spectrometry has been recognized to be not only a powerful analytical method, but also to represent a unique change to handle giant aromatic systems and to deposit them on a surface for further investigations, in a process, which is defined as “soft-landing”. Within this novel deposition technique, ions of the desired analytes or analyte mixtures are generated by means of an MS ionization source, discriminated by their different mass to charge ratios via a mass analyzer and landed with retention of their structure on a desired surface. This soft-deposition is guaranteed by the use of decelerating potentials, which have in this work been recognized to influence the final packing of the analyte molecules reaching the landing surface. For a more detailed study of the electrical field action on disc-like and rod-like molecules, soft-landing-independent experiments have been additionally carried out. As a result unidirectionally ordered films of the analyte molecules have been obtained due to the application of an external electrical strength. This versatile alignment technique has then been used for obtaining ordered layers of semiconducting materials for the fabrication of organic field effect transistors (OFET) with improved performances.
Resumo:
Addressing current limitations of state-of-the-art instrumentation in aerosol research, the aim of this work was to explore and assess the applicability of a novel soft ionization technique, namely flowing atmospheric-pressure afterglow (FAPA), for the mass spectrometric analysis of airborne particulate organic matter. Among other soft ionization methods, the FAPA ionization technique was developed in the last decade during the advent of ambient desorption/ionization mass spectrometry (ADI–MS). Based on a helium glow discharge plasma at atmospheric-pressure, excited helium species and primary reagent ions are generated which exit the discharge region through a capillary electrode, forming the so-called afterglow region where desorption and ionization of the analytes occurs. Commonly, fragmentation of the analytes during ionization is reported to occur only to a minimum extent, predominantly resulting in the formation of quasimolecular ions, i.e. [M+H]+ and [M–H]– in the positive and the negative ion mode, respectively. Thus, identification and detection of signals and their corresponding compounds is facilitated in the acquired mass spectra. The focus of the first part of this study lies on the application, characterization and assessment of FAPA–MS in the offline mode, i.e. desorption and ionization of the analytes from surfaces. Experiments in both positive and negative ion mode revealed ionization patterns for a variety of compound classes comprising alkanes, alcohols, aldehydes, ketones, carboxylic acids, organic peroxides, and alkaloids. Besides the always emphasized detection of quasimolecular ions, a broad range of signals for adducts and losses was found. Additionally, the capabilities and limitations of the technique were studied in three proof-of-principle applications. In general, the method showed to be best suited for polar analytes with high volatilities and low molecular weights, ideally containing nitrogen- and/or oxygen functionalities. However, for compounds with low vapor pressures, containing long carbon chains and/or high molecular weights, desorption and ionization is in direct competition with oxidation of the analytes, leading to the formation of adducts and oxidation products which impede a clear signal assignment in the acquired mass spectra. Nonetheless, FAPA–MS showed to be capable of detecting and identifying common limonene oxidation products in secondary OA (SOA) particles on a filter sample and, thus, is considered a suitable method for offline analysis of OA particles. In the second as well as the subsequent parts, FAPA–MS was applied online, i.e. for real time analysis of OA particles suspended in air. Therefore, the acronym AeroFAPA–MS (i.e. Aerosol FAPA–MS) was chosen to refer to this method. After optimization and characterization, the method was used to measure a range of model compounds and to evaluate typical ionization patterns in the positive and the negative ion mode. In addition, results from laboratory studies as well as from a field campaign in Central Europe (F–BEACh 2014) are presented and discussed. During the F–BEACh campaign AeroFAPA–MS was used in combination with complementary MS techniques, giving a comprehensive characterization of the sampled OA particles. For example, several common SOA marker compounds were identified in real time by MSn experiments, indicating that photochemically aged SOA particles were present during the campaign period. Moreover, AeroFAPA–MS was capable of detecting highly oxidized sulfur-containing compounds in the particle phase, presenting the first real-time measurements of this compound class. Further comparisons with data from other aerosol and gas-phase measurements suggest that both particulate sulfate as well as highly oxidized peroxyradicals in the gas phase might play a role during formation of these species. Besides applying AeroFAPA–MS for the analysis of aerosol particles, desorption processes of particles in the afterglow region were investigated in order to gain a more detailed understanding of the method. While during the previous measurements aerosol particles were pre-evaporated prior to AeroFAPA–MS analysis, in this part no external heat source was applied. Particle size distribution measurements before and after the AeroFAPA source revealed that only an interfacial layer of OA particles is desorbed and, thus, chemically characterized. For particles with initial diameters of 112 nm, desorption radii of 2.5–36.6 nm were found at discharge currents of 15–55 mA from these measurements. In addition, the method was applied for the analysis of laboratory-generated core-shell particles in a proof-of-principle study. As expected, predominantly compounds residing in the shell of the particles were desorbed and ionized with increasing probing depths, suggesting that AeroFAPA–MS might represent a promising technique for depth profiling of OA particles in future studies.
Resumo:
An accurate and sensitive species-specific GC-ICP-IDMS (gas chromatography inductively coupled plasma isotope dilution mass spectrometry) method for the determination of trimethyllead and a multi-species-specific GC-ICP-IDMS method for the simultaneous determination of trimethyllead, methylmercury, and butyltins in biological and environmental samples were developed. They allow the determination of corresponding elemental species down to the low ng g-1 range. The developed synthesis scheme for the formation of isotopically labeled Me3206Pb+ can be used for future production of this spike. The novel extraction technique, stir bar sorptive extraction (SBSE), was applied for the first time in connection with species-specific isotope dilution GC-ICP-MS for the determination of trimethyllead, methylmercury and butyltins. The results were compared with liquid-liquid extraction. The developed methods were validated by the analysis of certified reference materials. The liquid-liquid extraction GC-ICP-IDMS method was applied to seafood samples purchased from a supermarket. The methylated lead fraction in these samples, correlated to total lead, varied in a broad range of 0.01-7.6 %. On the contrary, the fraction of methylmercury is much higher, normally in the range of 80-98 %. The highest methylmercury content of up to 12 µg g-1 has been determined in shark samples, an animal which is at the end of the marine food chain, whereas in other seafood samples a MeHg+ content of less than 0.2 µg g-1 was found. Butyltin species could only be determined in samples, where anthropogenic contaminations must be assumed. This explains the observed broad variation of the butylated tin fraction in the range of <0.3-49 % in different seafood samples. Because all isotope-labelled spike compounds, except trimethyllead, are commercially available, the developed multi-species-specific GC-ICP-IDMS method has a high potential in future for routine analysis.
Resumo:
Heutzutage gewähren hochpräzise Massenmessungen mit Penning-Fallen tiefe Einblicke in die fundamentalen Eigenschaften der Kernmaterie. Zu diesem Zweck wird die freie Zyklotronfrequenz eines Ions bestimmt, das in einem starken, homogenen Magnetfeld gespeichert ist. Am ISOLTRAP-Massenspektrometer an ISOLDE / CERN können die Massen von kurzlebigen, radioaktiven Nukliden mit Halbwertszeiten bis zu einigen zehn ms mit einer Unsicherheit in der Größenordnung von 10^-8 bestimmt werden. ISOLTRAP besteht aus einem Radiofrequenz-Quadrupol zum akkumulieren der von ISOLDE gelieferten Ionen, sowie zwei Penning-Fallen zum säubern und zur Massenbestimmung der Ionen. Innerhalb dieser Arbeit wurden die Massen von neutronenreichen Xenon- und Radonisotopen (138-146Xe und 223-229Rn) gemessen. Für elf davon wurde zum ersten Mal die Masse direkt bestimmt; 229Rn wurde im Zuge dieses Experimentes sogar erstmalig beobachtet und seine Halbwertszeit konnte zu ungefähr 12 s bestimmt werden. Da die Masse eines Nuklids alle Wechselwirkungen innerhalb des Kerns widerspiegelt, ist sie einzigartig für jedes Nuklid. Eine dieser Wechselwirkungen, die Wechselwirkung zwischen Protonen und Neutronen, führt zum Beispiel zu Deformationen. Das Ziel dieser Arbeit ist eine Verbindung zwischen kollektiven Effekten, wie Deformationen und Doppeldifferenzen von Bindungsenergien, sogenannten deltaVpn-Werten zu finden. Insbesondere in den hier untersuchten Regionen zeigen deltaVpn-Werte ein sehr ungewöhnliches Verhalten, das sich nicht mit einfachen Argumenten deuten lässt. Eine Erklärung könnte das Auftreten von Oktupoldeformationen in diesen Gebieten sein. Nichtsdestotrotz ist eine quantitative Beschreibung von deltaVpn-Werten, die den Effekt von solchen Deformationen berücksichtigt mit modernen Theorien noch nicht möglich.
Resumo:
In this study the Aerodyne Aerosol Mass Spectrometer (AMS) was used during three laboratory measurement campaigns, FROST1, FROST2 and ACI-03. The FROST campaigns took place at the Leipzig Aerosol Cloud Interaction Simulator (LACIS) at the IfT in Leipzig and the ACI-03 campaign was conducted at the AIDA facility at the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT). In all three campaigns, the effect of coatings on mineral dust ice nuclei (IN) was investigated. During the FROST campaigns, Arizona Test Dust (ATD) particles of 200, 300 and 400 nm diameter were coated with thin coatings (< 7 nm) of sulphuric acid. At these very thin coatings, the AMS was operated close to its detection limits. Up to now it was not possible to accurately determine AMS detection limits during regular measurements. Therefore, the mathematical tools to analyse the detection limits of the AMS have been improved in this work. It is now possible to calculate detection limits of the AMS under operating conditions, without losing precious time by sampling through a particle filter. The instrument was characterised in more detail to enable correct quantification of the sulphate loadings on the ATD particle surfaces. Correction factors for the instrument inlet transmission, the collection efficiency, and the relative ionisation efficiency have been determined. With these corrections it was possible to quantify the sulphate mass per particle on the ATD after the condensation of sulphuric acid on its surface. The AMS results have been combined with the ice nucleus counter results. This revealed that the IN-efficiency of ATD is reduced when it is coated with sulphuric acid. The reason for this reduction is a chemical reaction of sulphuric acid with the particle's surface. These reactions are increasingly taking place when the aerosol is humidified or heated after the coating with sulphuric acid. A detailed analysis of the solubility and the evaporation temperature of the surface reaction products revealed that most likely aluminium sulphate is produced in these reactions.
Resumo:
The composition of the atmosphere is frequently perturbed by the emission of gaseous and particulate matter from natural as well as anthropogenic sources. While the impact of trace gases on the radiative forcing of the climate is relatively well understood the role of aerosol is far more uncertain. Therefore, the study of the vertical distribution of particulate matter in the atmosphere and its chemical composition contribute valuable information to bridge this gap of knowledge. The chemical composition of aerosol reveals information on properties such as radiative behavior and hygroscopicity and therefore cloud condensation or ice nucleus potential. rnThis thesis focuses on aerosol pollution plumes observed in 2008 during the POLARCAT (Polar Study using Aircraft, Remote Sensing, Surface Measurements and Models, of Climate, Chemistry, Aerosols, and Transport) campaign over Greenland in June/July and CONCERT (Contrail and Cirrus Experiment) campaign over Central and Western Europe in October/November. Measurements were performed with an Aerodyne compact time-of-flight aerosol mass spectrometer (AMS) capable of online size-resolved chemical characterization of non-refractory submicron particles. In addition, the origins of pollution plumes were determined by means of modeling tools. The characterized pollution episodes originated from a large variety of sources and were encountered at distinct altitudes. They included pure natural emissions from two volcanic eruptions in 2008. By the time of detection over Western Europe between 10 and 12 km altitude the plume was about 3 months old and composed to 71 % of particulate sulfate and 21 % of carbonaceous compounds. Also, biomass burning (BB) plumes were observed over Greenland between 4 and 7 km altitude (free troposphere) originating from Canada and East Siberia. The long-range transport took roughly one and two weeks, respectively. The aerosol was composed of 78 % organic matter and 22 % particulate sulfate. Some Canadian and all Siberian BB plumes were mixed with anthropogenic emissions from fossil fuel combustion (FF) in North America and East Asia. It was found that the contribution of particulate sulfate increased with growing influences from anthropogenic activity and Asia reaching up to 37 % after more than two weeks of transport time. The most exclusively anthropogenic emission source probed in the upper troposphere was engine exhaust from commercial aircraft liners over Germany. However, in-situ characterization of this aerosol type during aircraft chasing was not possible. All long-range transport aerosol was found to have an O:C ratio close to or greater than 1 implying that low-volatility oxygenated organic aerosol was present in each case despite the variety of origins and the large range in age from 3 to 100 days. This leads to the conclusion that organic particulate matter reaches a final and uniform state of oxygenation after at least 3 days in the free troposphere. rnExcept for aircraft exhaust all emission sources mentioned above are surface-bound and thus rely on different types of vertical transport mechanisms, such as direct high altitude injection in the case of a volcanic eruption, or severe BB, or uplift by convection, to reach higher altitudes where particles can travel long distances before removal mainly caused by cloud scavenging. A lifetime for North American mixed BB and FF aerosol of 7 to 11 days was derived. This in consequence means that emission from surface point sources, e.g. volcanoes, or regions, e.g. East Asia, do not only have a relevant impact on the immediate surroundings but rather on a hemispheric scale including such climate sensitive zones as the tropopause or the Arctic.
Resumo:
Primary varicella-zoster virus (VZV) infection during childhood leads to varicella commonly known as chickenpox. After primary infection has occurred VZV establishes latency in the host. During subsequent lifetime the virus can cause reactivated infection clinically known as herpes zoster or shingles. In immunodeficient patients’ dissemination of the virus can lead to life-threatening disease. Withdrawal of acyclovir drug prophylaxis puts allogeneic hematopoietic stem-cell transplantation (HSCT) patients at increased risk for herpes zoster as long as VZV-specific cellular immunity is impaired. Although an efficient live attenuated VZV vaccine for zoster prophylaxis exists, it is not approved in immunocompromised patients due to safety reasons. Knowledge of immunogenic VZV proteins would allow designing a noninfectious nonhazardous subunit vaccine suitable for patients with immunodeficiencies. The objective of this study was to identify T cell defined virus proteins of a VZV-infected Vero cell extract that we have recently described as a reliable antigen format for interferon-gamma (IFN-γ) enzyme-linked immunosorbent spot (ELISpot) assays (Distler et al. 2008). We first separated the VZV-infected/-uninfected Vero cell extracts by size filtration and reverse-phase high performance liquid chromatography (RP-HPLC). The collected fractions were screened for VZV reactivity with peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) of VZV-seropositive healthy individuals in the sensitive IFN-γ ELISpot assay. Using this strategy, we successfully identified bioactive fractions that contained immunogenic VZV material. VZV immune reactivity was mediated by CD4+ memory T lymphocytes (T cells) of VZV-seropositive healthy individuals as demonstrated in experiments with HLA blockade antibodies and T cell subpopulations already published by Distler et al. We next analyzed the bioactive fractions with electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (ESI-MS) techniques and identified the sequences of three VZV-derived proteins: glycoprotein E (gE); glycoprotein B (gB), and immediate early protein 62 (IE62). Complementary DNA of these identified proteins was used to generate in vitro transcribed RNA for effective expression in PBMCs by electroporation. We thereby established a reliable and convenient IFN-γ ELISPOT approach to screen PBMCs of healthy donors and HSCT patients for T cell reactivity to single full-length VZV proteins. Application in 10 VZV seropositive healthy donors demonstrated much stronger recognition of glycoproteins gE and gB compared to IE62. In addition, monitoring experiments with ex vivo PBMCs of 3 allo-HSCT patients detected strongly increased CD4+ T cell responses to gE and gB for several weeks to months after zoster onset, while IE62 reactivity remained moderate. Overall our results show for the first time that VZV glycoproteins gE and gB are major targets of the post-transplant anti-zoster CD4+ T cell response. The screening approach introduced herein may help to select VZV proteins recognized by memory CD4+ T cells for inclusion in a subunit vaccine, which can be safely used for zoster prophylaxis in immunocompromised HSCT patients.
Resumo:
Resonante Laserionisations-Massenspektrometrie an Gadolinium zur Isotopenhäufigkeitsanalyse mit geringsten Mengen Die selektive Spuren- und Ultraspurenanalyse des Erdalkalielements Gadolinium eröffnet eine Vielzahl von Anwendungen in der Biomedizin und Kosmochemie. Zum Erreichen der hohen Anforderungen bezüglich Isotopen- und Isobarenselektivität von S>10^7 sowie Gesamteffizienz von e>10^-6 wurde der Einsatz der resonanten Laserionisations-Massenspektrometrie untersucht. Dazu erfolgte die Weiterentwicklung und Anpassung des existierenden Diodenlaser-Quadrupolmassenspektrometersystems. Durch Ionenflugbahn-Simulationsrechnungen wurde für das Quadrupol-Massenspektrometer die erreichbare Nachbarmassenunterdrückung und Transmission in Abhängigkeit von der Auflösung theoretisch vorhergesagt. Die Werte wurden experimentell bestätigt. Aus der beobachteten Peakstruktur erfolgte die Ableitung einer Methode zur Bestimmung der Energieunschärfe des eingesetzten Ionisationsprozesses. Zum Auffinden eines effizienten dreifach resonanten Anregungsschemas wurden die Isotopieverschiebungen und Hyperfeinstrukturen aller stabilen Gadoliniumisotope in zahlreichen Übergängen für die einfach, zweifach und dreifach resonante Ionisation präzise vermessen. Das aufgenommene Spektrum autoionisierender Resonanzen zeigte etwa 150 bislang unbekannter Zustände mit Resonanzüberhöhungen von bis zu fünf Größenordnungen im Ionisationswirkungsquerschnitt. Die entwickelte Methode der Hyperfeinzustandsselektion ermöglichte die Bestimmung der Drehimpulsquantenzahl J der autoionisierenden Resonanzen. Die analytische Charakterisierung der dreistufig resonanten Ionisation von Gadolinium ergab eine Isotopen- und Isobarenselektivität von S(Isotop)>10^12 und S(Isobar)>10^7. Die mit dem Diodenlasersystem erreichte Nachweiseffizienz von e=1-3x10^-6 mit einer untergrundlimitierten Nachweisgrenze von wenigen 10^9 Atomen Gd-158 erlaubte erste Demonstrationsmessungen an medizinischen Gewebeproben.
Resumo:
ZusammenfassungDie Resonanzionisationsmassenspektrometrie (RIMS) verbindet hohe Elementselektivität mit guter Nachweiseffizienz. Aufgrund dieser Eigenschaften ist die Methode für Ultraspurenanalyse und Untersuchungen an seltenen oder schwer handhabbaren Elementen gut geeignet. Für RIMS werden neutrale Atome mit monochromatischem Laserlicht ein- oder mehrfach resonant auf energetisch hoch liegende Niveaus angeregt und anschließend durch einen weiteren Laserstrahl oder durch ein elektrisches Feld ionisiert. Die Photoionen werden in einem Massenspektrometer massenselektiv registriert.Ein Beispiel für die Anwendung von RIMS ist die präzise Bestimmung der Ionisationsenergie als fundamentale physikalisch-chemische Eigenschaft eines bestimmten Elements; insbesondere bei den Actinoiden ist die Kenntnis der Ionisationsenergie von Interesse, da es dort bis zur Anwendung der laser-massenspektroskopischer Methode nur wenige experimentelle Daten gab. Die Bestimmung der Ionisationsenergie erfolgt durch die Methode der Photoionisation im elektrischen Feld gemäß dem klassischen Sattelpunktsmodell. Im Experiment werden neutrale Atome in einem Atomstrahl mittels Laserlicht zunächst resonant angeregt. Die angeregten Atome befinden sich in einem äußeren, statischen elektrischen Feld und werden durch einen weiteren Laserstrahl, dessen Wellenlänge durchgestimmt wird, ionisiert. Das Überschreiten der Laserschwelle macht sich durch einen starken Anstieg im Ionensignal bemerkbar. Man führt diese Messung bei verschiedenen elektrischen Feldstärken durch und erhält bei Auftragen der Ionisationsschwellen gegen die Wurzel der elektrischen Feldstärke durch Extrapolation auf die Feldstärke Null die Ionisationsenergie.Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit wurde die Ionisationsenergie von Actinium erstmalig zu 43398(3) cm-1 º 5,3807(4) eV experimentell bestimmt. Dazu wurden Actiniumatome zunächst einstufig resonant mit einem Laser mit einer Wellenlänge von 388,67 nm auf einen Zustand bei 25729,03 cm-1 angeregt und anschließend mit Laserlicht mit einer Wellenlänge von ca. 568 nm ionisiert. Damit sind die Ionisationsenergien aller Actinoiden bis einschließlich Einsteinium mit Ausnahme von Protactinium bekannt. Als Atomstrahlquelle wird ein spezielles 'Sandwichfilament' benutzt, bei dem das Actinoid als Hydroxid auf eine Tantalfolie aufgebracht und mit einer reduzierenden Deckschicht überzogen wird. Das Actinoid dampft bei Heizen dieser Anordnung atomar ab. Bei den schwereren Actinoiden wurde Titan als Deckschicht verwendet. Um einen Actiniumatomstrahl zu erzeugen, wurde aufgrund der hohen Abdampftemperaturen statt Titan erstmals Zirkonium eingesetzt. Bei Protactinium wurde Thorium, welches noch stärkere Reduktionseigenschaften aufweist, als Deckmaterial eingesetzt. Trotzdem gelang es mit der 'Sandwichtechnik' nicht, einen Protactiniumatomstrahl zu erzeugen. In der Flugzeitapparatur wurde lediglich ein Protactinium-monoxidionensignal detektiert. Um ein erst seit kurzem verfügbares Fest-körperlasersystem zu explorieren, wurden zusätzlich noch die bekannten Ionisations-ener-gien von Gadolinium und Plutonium erneut bestimmt. Die gemessenen Werte stimmen mit Literaturdaten gut überein.Ferner wurde noch ein bestehender Trennungsgang für Plutonium aus Umweltproben auf die Matrices Meerwasser und Hausstaub angepasst und für die Bestimmung von Plutonium und dessen Isotopenzusammensetzung in verschiedenen Probenreihen mittels RIMS eingesetzt. Der modifizierte Trennungsgang ermöglicht das schnelle Aufarbeiten von großen Probenmengen für Reihenuntersuchungen von Plutoniumkontaminationen. Die ermittelten Gehalten an 239Pu lagen zwischen 8,2*107 Atome pro 10 l Meerwasserprobe und 1,7*109Atome pro Gramm Staubprobe.
Resumo:
Die Resonanzionisations-Massenspektrometrie (RIMS) ist sowohl für spektroskopische Untersuchungen seltener Isotope als auch für den Ultraspurennachweis langlebiger radioaktiver Elemente einsetzbar. Durch die mehrstufige resonante Anregung atomarer Energieniveaus mit anschließender Ionisation mit Laserlicht wird eine sehr hohe Elementselektivität und Ionisationseffizienz erreicht. Der nachfolgende massenselektive Ionennachweis liefert eine gute Isotopenselektivität zusammen mit einer effektiven Untergrundunterdrückung. Ein wichtiger Bestandteil der RIMS-Apparatur ist ein zuverlässig arbeitendes, leistungsstarkes Lasersystem für die Resonanzionisation. Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit wurde ein von einem hochrepetierenden Nd:YAG-Laser gepumptes, aus drei Titan-Saphir-Lasern bestehendes System fertig aufgebaut und in den Routinebetrieb überführt. Die Titan-Saphir-Laser liefern im Durchstimmbereich von 730 - 880 nm eine mittlere Leistung von bis zu 3 W pro Laser bei einer Linienbreite von 2 - 3 GHz. Sie lassen sich computergesteuert in ihren Wellenlängen durchstimmen. Die mittels Resonanzionisation erzeugten Ionen werden dann in einem Flugzeit-Massenspektrometer entsprechend ihrer Masse aufgetrennt und mit einem Kanalplattendetektor nachgewiesen.Als Voraussetzung für die isotopenselektive Ultraspurenanalyse von Plutonium wurden mit diesem Lasersystem die Isotopieverschiebungen eines effizienten, dreistufigen Anregungsschema für Plutonium bestimmt. Die Laserleistungen reichen zur vielfachen Sättigung der ersten beiden Anregungsschritte und zur zweifachen Sättigung des dritten Anregungsschritts aus.Außerdem wurden die Ionisationsenergien von Pu-239 und Pu-244 zur Untersuchung ihrer Isotopenabhängigkeit bestimmt. Die beiden Ionisationsenergien sind im Rahmen der erreichten Genauigkeit bei einem Meßwert von IP239-IP244 = 0,24(82) cm^-1 gleich.Die Nachweiseffizienz der RIMS-Apparatur für Plutonium wurde in Effizienzmessungen zu 10^-5 bestimmt. Durch die gute Untergrundunterdrückung ergab sich daraus eine Nachweisgrenze von 10^6 Atomen bei der Messung eines Plutoniumisotops. Die Bestimmung der Isotopenverhältnisse von Proben mit einer zertifizierten Isotopenzusammensetzung lieferte eine gute Übereinstimmung der Meßwerte mit den angegebenen Zusammensetzungen.Die RIMS-Apparatur wurde zur Bestimmung des Gehalts und der Isotopenzusammensetzung von Plutonium in Meerwasser- und Staubproben eingesetzt.Auf Grund der Isotopenzusammensetzung konnte gezeigt werden, daß das Plutonium bei den meisten Proben aus dem Fallout von oberirdischen Kernwaffentests stammte. Des weiteren wurde Plutonium in Urinproben bestimmt. Die Nachweisgrenzen lagen bei diesen Umweltproben bei 10^6 bis 10^7 Atomen Plutonium und damit um zwei Größenordnungen niedriger als die Nachweisgrenze für Pu-239 bei der alpha-Spektroskopie, der Standardmethode für den Plutoniumnachweis.
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Die resonante Laserionisation hat sich als ein universales Verfahren für eine Vielzahl von Anwendungen etabliert, die eine selektive Ionisation bei hoher Effizienz erfordern. Hierzu wurden zwei Lasersysteme mit unterschiedlichen Zielsetzungen und Schwerpunkten entwickelt und in dieser Arbeit angewendet. Im ersten Teil der Arbeit wird die Entwicklung der hochauflösenden Resonanzionisations-Massenspektrometrie zum Ultraspurennachweis von 41Ca vorgestellt. Hierzu wurden drei kontinuierliche Diodenlaser mit einem Quadrupolmassenspektrometer kombiniert. Bei einer Nachweiseffizienz von 1 × 10^−5 konnte eine Nachweisgrenze von 2 × 10^-13 41Ca/totCa erreicht werden. Das in den Routinebetrieb überführte Meßverfahren ermöglichte die Teilnahme an einem interdisziplinären Netzwerk zur Osteoporose-Forschung. In Vergleichsmessungen der Resonanzionisations-Massenspektrometrie mit allen derzeit existierenden Meßverfahren zum 41Ca-Ultraspurennachweis konnte eine sehr gute Übereinstimmung erzielt werden. Der zweite Teil der Arbeit beinhaltet die Adaption eines durchstimmbaren, hochrepetierenden Titan:Saphir-Lasersystem für den Einsatz an Laserionenquellen zur selektiven Erzeugung radioaktiver Ionenstrahlen. Das entwickelte Lasersystem ermöglicht eine effiziente, resonante Anregung des Großteils der Elemente im Periodensystem. Hierzu wurde eine kombinierte Frequenzverdopplungs- und Frequenzverdreifachungseinheit zur Erzeugung höherer Harmonischer aufgebaut. Die Anwendbarkeit eines solchen reinen Festkörper-Lasersystems wurde in zahlreichen off-line Testmessungen sowohl in Mainz als auch an den ISOL Einrichtungen am TRIUMF und ORNL gezeigt und führte zum ersten on-line Einsatz am TRIUMF.
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Die vorliegende Dissertation beschreibt die Entwicklung, den Aufbau und die Erprobung eines neuartigen lasermassenspektrometrischen Nachweises des Ultraspurenisotops 236U. Das Nuklid 236U wird vorwiegend in Kernreaktoren durch Neutroneneinfang aus 235U gebildet und dient damit als Schlüsselisotop zur Unterscheidung anthropogenen Urans von natürlichem Uran-Vorkommen. Mit seinem Nachweis wird die Untersuchung der Migration von Kernbrennstoff in der Umwelt und die Beantwortung kritischer Fragen in der nuklearen Forensik ermöglicht. Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit wurde das Verfahren der hochauflösenden Resonanzionisations-Massenspektrometrie auf die Anforderungen des selektiven Nachweises von Uran-Isotopen angepasst. Wesentliche Schritte waren hierbei die Untersuchung einer effizienten Atomisation von Uran-Proben, die Identifikation atomarer und autoionisierender Zustände für eine resonante Anregungsleiter, die vollständige Spezifikation der Anregungsleiter für alle Uran-Isotope und schließlich die Umsetzung der Erkenntnisse in ein analytisches Messverfahren. Die optische Selektivität des Verfahrens konnte durch Dichtematrixrechnungen zu ca. 14 Größenordnungen abgeschätzt werden; die Nachweisgrenze des Verfahrens für das Isotopenverhältnis 236U / 238U ist dabei gegenwärtig durch Untergrund begrenzt und beträgt ca. 3 · 10−8. Mit diesen Spezifikationen konnte die Linearität und Präzision des Nachweisverfahrens über einen dynamischen Bereich von vier Größenordnungen nachgewiesen werden.
Resumo:
For the safety assessments of nuclear waste repositories, the possible migration of the radiotoxic waste into environment must be considered. Since plutonium is the major contribution at the radiotoxicity of spent nuclear waste, it requires special care with respect to its mobilization into the groundwater. Plutonium has one of the most complicated chemistry of all elements. It can coexist in 4 oxidation states parallel in one solution. In this work is shown that in the presence of humic substances it is reduced to the Pu(III) and Pu(IV). This work has the focus on the interaction of Pu(III) with natural occurring compounds (humic substances and clay minerals bzw. Kaolinite), while Pu(IV) was studied in a parallel doctoral work by Banik (in preparation). As plutonium is expected under extreme low concentrations in the environment, very sensitive methods are needed to monitor its presence and for its speciation. Resonance ionization mass spectrometry (RIMS), was used for determining the concentration of Pu in environmental samples, with a detection limit of 106- 107 atoms. For the speciation of plutonium CE-ICP-MS was routinely used to monitor the behaviour of Pu in the presence of humic substances. In order to reduce the detection limits of the speciation methods, the coupling of CE to RIMS was proposed. The first steps have shown that this can be a powerful tool for studies of pu under environmental conditions. Further, the first steps in the coupling of two parallel working detectors (DAD and ICP_MS ) to CE was performed, for the enabling a precise study of the complexation constants of plutonium with humic substances. The redox stabilization of Pu(III) was studied and it was determined that NH2OHHCl can maintain Pu(III) in the reduced form up to pH 5.5 – 6. The complexation constants of Pu(III) with Aldrich humic acid (AHA) were determined at pH 3 and 4. the logß = 6.2 – 6.8 found for these experiments was comparable with the literature. The sorption of Pu(III) onto kaolinite was studied in batch experiments and it was determine dthat the pH edge was at pH ~ 5.5. The speciation of plutonium on the surface of kaolinite was studied by EXAFS/XANES. It was determined that the sorbed species was Pu(IV). The influence of AHA on the sorption of Pu(III) onto kaolinite was also investigated. It was determined that at pH < 5 the adsorption is enhanced by the presence of AHA (25 mg/L), while at pH > 6 the adsorption is strongly impaired (depending also on the adding sequence of the components), leading to a mobilization of plutonium in solution.
Resumo:
Plutonium represents the major contribution to the radiotoxicity of spent nuclear fuel over storage times of up to several hundred thousand years. The speciation of plutonium in aquifer systems is important in order to assess the risks of high-level nuclear waste disposal and to acquire a deep knowledge of the mobilization and immobilization behavior of plutonium. In aqueous solutions, plutonium can coexist in four oxidation states and each one of them has different chemical and physical behavior. Tetravalent plutonium is the most abundant under natural conditions. Therefore, detailed speciation studies of tetravalent plutonium in contact with humic substances (HS) and kaolinite as a model clay mineral have been performed in this work. Plutonium is present in the environment at an ultratrace level. Therefore, speciation of Pu at the ultratrace level is mandatory. Capillary electrophoresis (CE) coupled to resonance ionization mass spectrometry (RIMS) was used as a new speciation method. CE-RIMS enables to improve the detection limit for plutonium species by 2 to 3 orders of magnitude compared to the previously developed CE-ICP-MS. For understanding the behavior of Pu(IV) in aqueous systems, redox reactions, complexation, and sorption behavior of plutonium were studied. The redox behavior of plutonium in contact with humic acid (HA) and fulvic acid (FA) was investigated. A relatively fast reduction of Pu(VI) in contact with HS was observed. It was mainly reduced to Pu(IV) and Pu(III) within a couple of weeks. The time dependence of the Pu(IV) complexation with Aldrich HA was investigated and a complex constant (logßLC) between 6.4 - 8.4 of Pu(IV) was determined by means of ultrafiltration taking into account the loading capacity (LC). The sorption of tetravalent plutonium onto kaolinite was investigated as a function of pH in batch experiments under aerobic and anaerobic conditions. The sorption edge was found at about pH = 1 and a maximum sorption at around pH = 8.5. In the presence of CO2 at pH > 8.5, the sorption of plutonium was decreased probably due to the formation of soluble carbonate complexes. For comparison, the sorption of Th(IV) onto kaolinite was also investigated and consistent results were found. The Pu(IV) sorption onto kaolinite was studied by XANES and EXAFS at pH 1, 4, 9 and the sorbed species on kaolinite surface was Pu(IV). Depending on the pH, only 1 - 10 % of the sorbed plutonium is desorbed from kaolinite and released into a fresh solution at the same pH value. Furthermore, the sorption of HS onto kaolinite was studied as a function of pH at varying concentrations of HS, as a prerequisite to understand the more complex ternary system. The sorption of HA onto kaolinite was found to be higher than that of FA. The investigation of the ternary systems (plutonium-kaolinite-humic substances) is performed as a function of pH, concentration of HS, and the sequences of adding the reactants. The presence of HS strongly influences the sorption of Pu(IV) onto kaolinite over the entire pH range. For comparison, the influence of HS on the sorption of Th(IV) onto kaolinite was also investigated and a good agreement with the results of Pu(IV) was obtained.
Resumo:
The present-day climate in the Mediterranean region is characterized by mild, wet winters and hot, dry summers. There is contradictory evidence as to whether the present-day conditions (“Mediterranean climate”) already existed in the Late Miocene. This thesis presents seasonally-resolved isotope and element proxy data obtained from Late Miocene reef corals from Crete (Southern Aegean, Eastern Mediterranean) in order to illustrate climate conditions in the Mediterranean region during this time. There was a transition from greenhouse to icehouse conditions without a Greenland ice sheet during the Late Miocene. Since the Greenland ice sheet is predicted to melt fully within the next millennia, Late Miocene climate mechanisms can be considered as useful analogues in evaluating models of Northern Hemispheric climate conditions in the future. So far, high resolution chemical proxy data on Late Miocene environments are limited. In order to enlarge the proxy database for this time span, coral genus Tarbellastraea was evaluated as a new proxy archive, and proved reliable based on consistent oxygen isotope records of Tarbellastraea and the established paleoenvironmental archive of coral genus Porites. In combination with lithostratigraphic data, global 87Sr/86Sr seawater chronostratigraphy was used to constrain the numerical age of the coral sites, assuming the Mediterranean Sea to be equilibrated with global open ocean water. 87Sr/86Sr ratios of Tarbellastraea and Porites from eight stratigraphically different sampling sites were measured by thermal ionization mass spectrometry. The ratios range from 0.708900 to 0.708958 corresponding to ages of 10 to 7 Ma (Tortonian to Early Messinian). Spectral analyses of multi-decadal time-series yield interannual δ18O variability with periods of ~2 and ~5 years, similar to that of modern records, indicating that pressure field systems comparable to those controlling the seasonality of present-day Mediterranean climate existed, at least intermittently, already during the Late Miocene. In addition to sea surface temperature (SST), δ18O composition of coral aragonite is controlled by other parameters such as local seawater composition which as a result of precipitation and evaporation, influences sea surface salinity (SSS). The Sr/Ca ratio is considered to be independent of salinity, and was used, therefore, as an additional proxy to estimate seasonality in SST. Major and trace element concentrations in coral aragonite determined by laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry yield significant variations along a transect perpendicular to coral growth increments, and record varying environmental conditions. The comparison between the average SST seasonality of 7°C and 9°C, derived from average annual δ18O (1.1‰) and Sr/Ca (0.579 mmol/mol) amplitudes, respectively, indicates that the δ18O-derived SST seasonality is biased by seawater composition, reducing the δ18O amplitude by 0.3‰. This value is equivalent to a seasonal SSS variation of 1‰, as observed under present-day Aegean Sea conditions. Concentration patterns of non-lattice bound major and trace elements, related to trapped particles within the coral skeleton, reflect seasonal input of suspended load into the reef environment. δ18O, Sr/Ca and non-lattice bound element proxy records, as well as geochemical compositions of the trapped particles, provide evidence for intense precipitation in the Eastern Mediterranean during winters. Winter rain caused freshwater discharge and transport of weathering products from the hinterland into the reef environment. There is a trend in coral δ18O data to more positive mean δ18O values (–2.7‰ to –1.7‰) coupled with decreased seasonal δ18O amplitudes (1.1‰ to 0.7‰) from 10 to 7 Ma. This relationship is most easily explained in terms of more positive summer δ18O. Since coral diversity and annual growth rates indicate more or less constant average SST for the Mediterranean from the Tortonian to the Early Messinian, more positive mean and summer δ18O indicate increasing aridity during the Late Miocene, and more pronounced during summers. The analytical results implicate that winter rainfall and summer drought, the main characteristics of the present-day Mediterranean climate, were already present in the Mediterranean region during the Late Miocene. Some models have argued that the Mediterranean climate did not exist in this region prior to the Pliocene. However, the data presented here show that conditions comparable to those of the present-day existed either intermittently or permanently since at least about 10 Ma.