date: 2023-09-01T04:34:20Z pdf:unmappedUnicodeCharsPerPage: 0 pdf:PDFVersion: 1.7 pdf:docinfo:title: Background Tests and Improvements at LAC-UFF Aiming at Sample Size Reduction in Foraminifera 14C Measurement xmp:CreatorTool: LaTeX with hyperref Keywords: radiocarbon; contamination; background; small carbonate samples; accelerator mass spectrometry access_permission:modify_annotations: true access_permission:can_print_degraded: true subject: Foraminifera are widely used in paleoclimatic and paleoceanographic studies, providing information about past ocean conditions. However, in order to use these tracers, it is essential to obtain an accurate chronology. Radiocarbon has proven to be a powerful tool in developing robust chronologies. Sample sizes of a few milligrams of carbonate material are needed for precise radiocarbon determination using accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS). In the specific case of paleoceanographic and paleoenvironmental studies, Foraminifera microfossils are the most important indicator of oceanic conditions. However, for establishing the chronology of deposition, sample availability is often limited. In AMS facilities using solid ion sources, such as the Radiocarbon Laboratory of the Universidade Federal Fluminense (LAC-UFF), in Brazil, CO2 samples need to be converted to graphite after physical and chemical pre-treatment to remove contamination. Reducing the sample sizes increases the relative contribution of contamination and can favor increased background levels. In this work, we tested different amounts of 14C-free carbonate samples as a means to evaluate the pattern of contamination. For the sealed tube Zn/TiH2 graphitization method, we tested prebaking the graphitization tubes and compared storage procedures. As a result, the background for regular-sized samples was decreased, and accurate measurement of carbonate samples containing ca. 0.5 mg C could be performed. Prebaked graphitization tubes can safely be stored in desiccator cabinets for up to 4 weeks. Foraminifera samples with mass as low as 1 mg (ca. 0.1 mg C) can now be measured at the LAC-UFF AMS facility, provided that C contamination can be estimated and corrected. The developments presented in this work allowed for the study of species-specific Foraminifera and other small-sized carbonate samples. dc:creator: Bruna M. Netto, Kita D. Macario, Ayrton Assumpção, Maikel Diaz, Stewart J. Fallon, Xiaomei Xu, Ingrid Chanca and Carla Carvalho dcterms:created: 2023-09-01T04:29:12Z Last-Modified: 2023-09-01T04:34:20Z dcterms:modified: 2023-09-01T04:34:20Z dc:format: application/pdf; version=1.7 title: Background Tests and Improvements at LAC-UFF Aiming at Sample Size Reduction in Foraminifera 14C Measurement Last-Save-Date: 2023-09-01T04:34:20Z pdf:docinfo:creator_tool: LaTeX with hyperref access_permission:fill_in_form: true pdf:docinfo:keywords: radiocarbon; contamination; background; small carbonate samples; accelerator mass spectrometry pdf:docinfo:modified: 2023-09-01T04:34:20Z meta:save-date: 2023-09-01T04:34:20Z pdf:encrypted: false dc:title: Background Tests and Improvements at LAC-UFF Aiming at Sample Size Reduction in Foraminifera 14C Measurement modified: 2023-09-01T04:34:20Z cp:subject: Foraminifera are widely used in paleoclimatic and paleoceanographic studies, providing information about past ocean conditions. However, in order to use these tracers, it is essential to obtain an accurate chronology. Radiocarbon has proven to be a powerful tool in developing robust chronologies. Sample sizes of a few milligrams of carbonate material are needed for precise radiocarbon determination using accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS). In the specific case of paleoceanographic and paleoenvironmental studies, Foraminifera microfossils are the most important indicator of oceanic conditions. However, for establishing the chronology of deposition, sample availability is often limited. In AMS facilities using solid ion sources, such as the Radiocarbon Laboratory of the Universidade Federal Fluminense (LAC-UFF), in Brazil, CO2 samples need to be converted to graphite after physical and chemical pre-treatment to remove contamination. Reducing the sample sizes increases the relative contribution of contamination and can favor increased background levels. In this work, we tested different amounts of 14C-free carbonate samples as a means to evaluate the pattern of contamination. For the sealed tube Zn/TiH2 graphitization method, we tested prebaking the graphitization tubes and compared storage procedures. As a result, the background for regular-sized samples was decreased, and accurate measurement of carbonate samples containing ca. 0.5 mg C could be performed. Prebaked graphitization tubes can safely be stored in desiccator cabinets for up to 4 weeks. Foraminifera samples with mass as low as 1 mg (ca. 0.1 mg C) can now be measured at the LAC-UFF AMS facility, provided that C contamination can be estimated and corrected. The developments presented in this work allowed for the study of species-specific Foraminifera and other small-sized carbonate samples. pdf:docinfo:subject: Foraminifera are widely used in paleoclimatic and paleoceanographic studies, providing information about past ocean conditions. However, in order to use these tracers, it is essential to obtain an accurate chronology. Radiocarbon has proven to be a powerful tool in developing robust chronologies. Sample sizes of a few milligrams of carbonate material are needed for precise radiocarbon determination using accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS). In the specific case of paleoceanographic and paleoenvironmental studies, Foraminifera microfossils are the most important indicator of oceanic conditions. However, for establishing the chronology of deposition, sample availability is often limited. In AMS facilities using solid ion sources, such as the Radiocarbon Laboratory of the Universidade Federal Fluminense (LAC-UFF), in Brazil, CO2 samples need to be converted to graphite after physical and chemical pre-treatment to remove contamination. Reducing the sample sizes increases the relative contribution of contamination and can favor increased background levels. In this work, we tested different amounts of 14C-free carbonate samples as a means to evaluate the pattern of contamination. For the sealed tube Zn/TiH2 graphitization method, we tested prebaking the graphitization tubes and compared storage procedures. As a result, the background for regular-sized samples was decreased, and accurate measurement of carbonate samples containing ca. 0.5 mg C could be performed. Prebaked graphitization tubes can safely be stored in desiccator cabinets for up to 4 weeks. Foraminifera samples with mass as low as 1 mg (ca. 0.1 mg C) can now be measured at the LAC-UFF AMS facility, provided that C contamination can be estimated and corrected. The developments presented in this work allowed for the study of species-specific Foraminifera and other small-sized carbonate samples. Content-Type: application/pdf pdf:docinfo:creator: Bruna M. Netto, Kita D. Macario, Ayrton Assumpção, Maikel Diaz, Stewart J. Fallon, Xiaomei Xu, Ingrid Chanca and Carla Carvalho X-Parsed-By: org.apache.tika.parser.DefaultParser creator: Bruna M. Netto, Kita D. Macario, Ayrton Assumpção, Maikel Diaz, Stewart J. Fallon, Xiaomei Xu, Ingrid Chanca and Carla Carvalho meta:author: Bruna M. Netto, Kita D. Macario, Ayrton Assumpção, Maikel Diaz, Stewart J. Fallon, Xiaomei Xu, Ingrid Chanca and Carla Carvalho dc:subject: radiocarbon; contamination; background; small carbonate samples; accelerator mass spectrometry meta:creation-date: 2023-09-01T04:29:12Z created: 2023-09-01T04:29:12Z access_permission:extract_for_accessibility: true access_permission:assemble_document: true xmpTPg:NPages: 10 Creation-Date: 2023-09-01T04:29:12Z pdf:charsPerPage: 3729 access_permission:extract_content: true access_permission:can_print: true meta:keyword: radiocarbon; contamination; background; small carbonate samples; accelerator mass spectrometry Author: Bruna M. Netto, Kita D. Macario, Ayrton Assumpção, Maikel Diaz, Stewart J. Fallon, Xiaomei Xu, Ingrid Chanca and Carla Carvalho producer: pdfTeX-1.40.21 access_permission:can_modify: true pdf:docinfo:producer: pdfTeX-1.40.21 pdf:docinfo:created: 2023-09-01T04:29:12Z