The interconversion of δ2H values of collagen between thermal conversion reactor configurations

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Abstract

Rationale: Different thermal conversion reactor packings result in distinct δ2H values in nitrogen-containing materials, such as bone collagen. An older ‘traditional’ glassy carbon packing method causes incomplete conversion of N-containing samples into H2 gas, resulting in altered δ2H values compared with the complete conversion of hydrogen obtained with a chromium-packed reactor. Given that δ2H values from collagen are gaining importance in palaeoecological and archaeological studies, a determination of the relationship between δ2H values produced with a glassy-carbon-packed and a chromium-packed reactor is needed. Methods: We obtained δ2H values (normalized on the VSMOW-SLAP scale) from both glassy-carbon-packed (GP) and chromium-packed (Cr) reactor configurations from bone collagen (n = 231) from a variety of archaeological sites, using a High-Temperature Conversion Elemental Analyzer (TC/EA) coupled to a Delta Plus XP isotope ratio mass spectrometer. Results: δ2H values from both methods are linearly correlated (r2 = 0.934) and yield the following interconversion equation, δ2H(Cr) = 1.054 δ2H(GP) + 11.6‰ (95% conf. slope 1.020–1.090, intercept 10.6–12.6), and a mean difference of δ2H(Cr) – δ2H(GP) = 10.1‰ (1 sd 5.2, 1 se 0.3, n = 231). Conclusions: We recommend adopting this interconversion between δ2H values produced with a glassy-carbon-packed and chromium-packed reactor for bone collagen only, with appropriate propagation of uncertainty.

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Reynard, L. M., Ryan, S. E., & Tuross, N. (2019). The interconversion of δ2H values of collagen between thermal conversion reactor configurations. Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry, 33(7), 678–682. https://doi.org/10.1002/rcm.8396

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