Isotopologue
Isotopologues are molecules that differ only in their isotopic composition. Simply, the isotopologue of a chemical species has at least one atom with a different number of neutrons than the parent.
An example is water, where some of its hydrogen-related isotopologues are: "light water" (HOH or H2O), "semi-heavy water" with the deuterium isotope in equal proportion to protium (HDO or 1H2HO), "heavy water" with two deuterium isotopes of hydrogen per molecule (D2O or 2H2O), and "super-heavy water" or tritiated water (T2O or 3H2O), where the hydrogen atoms are replaced with tritium isotopes. Oxygen-related isotopologues of water include the commonly available form of heavy-oxygen water (H218O) and the more difficult to separate version with the 17O isotope. Both elements may be replaced by isotopes, for example in the doubly labeled water isotopologue D218O.
Isotopologues differ from isotopomers in that the atom(s) of different isotope may be placed anywhere in a molecule, while isotopomers specify where the atom of different isotope is located within a molecule. Logically, it follows that two isotopomers of a compound may be the same isotopologue, but two isotopologues must necessarily be two isotopomers. In the example of mono-deuterated ethanol, CH3−CH2−O−D and CH2D−CH2−O−H are two distinct isotopomers of the same isotopologue with molecular formula C2H5DO. Isotopomerism is analogous to constitutional isomerism (relative positions of atoms in a molecule). Some molecules like water and carbon dioxide only have one isotopomer per isotopologue, as the positions of the non-central atoms are indistinguishable.
Singly substituted isotopologues
Analytical chemistry applications
Singly substituted isotopologues may be used for nuclear magnetic resonance experiments, where deuterated solvents such as deuterated chloroform (CDCl3) do not interfere with the solutes' 1H signals, and in investigations of the kinetic isotope effect.
Geochemical applications
In the field of stable isotope geochemistry, isotopologues of simple molecules containing rare heavy isotopes of carbon, oxygen, hydrogen, nitrogen, and sulfur are used to trace equilibrium and kinetic processes in natural environments and in Earth's past.
Doubly substituted isotopologues
Measurement of the abundance of doubly substituted isotopologues of gases such as CO2,[1] methane,[2] nitrogen[3] and oxygen[4] have been used in the field of stable isotope geochemistry to trace equilibrium and kinetic processes in the environment inaccessible by analysis of singly substituted isotopologues alone.
Currently measured doubly substituted isotopologues include (but are not limited to):
- 13C18O16O (see also clumped isotopes),
- 13CH3D,[5][6]
- 12CH2D2,
- 18O18O and 17O18O,
- 15N15N,
- 14N15N18O and 15N14N18O.[7]
Analytical requirements
Because of the relative rarity of the heavy isotopes of C, H, and O, IRMS of doubly substituted species requires larger volumes of sample gas and longer analysis times than traditional stable isotope measurements, thereby requiring extremely stable instrumentation. In addition, the doubly-substituted isotopologues are often subject to isobaric interferences, as in the methane system where 13CH5+ and 12CH3D+ ions interfere with measurement of the 12CH2D2+ and 13CH3D+ species at mass 18. A measurement of such species requires either very high mass resolving power to separate one isobar from another,[8] or modeling of the contributions of the interfering species to the abundance of the species of interest. These analytical challenges are significant: The first publication precisely measuring doubly substituted isotopologues did not appear until 2004, though singly substituted isotopologues had been measured for decades previously.[9]
As an alternative to more conventional gas source IRMS instruments, tunable diode laser absorption spectroscopy has also emerged as a method to measure doubly substituted species free from isobaric interferences, and has been applied to the methane isotopologue 13CH3D.
Equilibrium fractionation
When a light isotope is replaced with a heavy isotope (e.g., 13C for 12C), the bond between the two atoms will vibrate more slowly, thereby lowering the zero-point energy of the bond and acting to stabilize the molecule.[10] An isotopologue with a doubly substituted bond is therefore slightly more thermodynamically stable, which will tend to produce a higher abundance of the doubly substituted (or “clumped”) species than predicted by the statistical abundance of each heavy isotope (known as a stochastic distribution of isotopes). This effect increases in magnitude with decreasing temperature, so the abundance of the clumped species is related to the temperature at which the gas was formed or equilibrated.[11] By measuring the abundance of the clumped species in standard gases formed in equilibrium at known temperatures, the thermometer can be calibrated and applied to samples with unknown abundances.
Kinetic fractionation
The abundances of multiply substituted isotopologues can also be affected by kinetic processes. As for singly substituted isotopologues, departures from thermodynamic equilibrium in a doubly-substituted species can implicate the presence of a particular reaction taking place. Photochemistry occurring in the atmosphere has been shown to alter the abundance of 18O2 from equilibrium, as has photosynthesis.[12] Measurements of 13CH3D and 12CH2D2 can identify microbial processing of methane and have been used to demonstrate the significance of quantum tunneling in the formation of methane, as well as mixing and equilibration of multiple methane reservoirs. Variations in the relative abundances of the two N2O isotopologues 14N15N18O and 15N14N18O can distinguish whether N2O has been produced by bacterial denitrification or by bacterial nitrification.
See also
References
- ↑ Ghosh, Prosenjit, et al. "13 C–18 O bonds in carbonate minerals: A new kind of paleothermometer". Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 70.6 (2006): 1439–1456.
- ↑ Young E. D., Kohl I. E., Sherwood Lollar B., Etiope G., Rumble D. III, Li S., Haghnegahdar M. A., Schauble E. A., McCain K. A., Foustoukos D. I., Sutclife C., Warr O., Ballentine C. J., Onstott T. C., Hosgormez H., Neubeck A., Marques J. M., Pérez-Rodríguez I., Rowe A. R., LaRowe D. E., Magnabosco C., Yeung L. Y., Ash J. L., and Bryndzia L. T. (2017) "The relative abundances of resolved 12CH2D2 and 13CH3D and mechanisms controlling isotopic bond ordering in abiotic and biotic methane gas". Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 203, 235–264.
- ↑ Young E. D., Rumble D. III, Freedman P., and Mills M. (2016) "A large-radius high-mass-resolution multiple-collector isotope ratio mass spectrometer for analysis of rare isotopologues of O2, N2, and CH4 and other gases". International Journal of Mass Spectrometry 401, 1–10.
- ↑ Yeung L. Y., Young E. D., and Schauble E. A. (2012) "Measurements of 18O18O and 17O18O in the atmosphere and the role of isotope-exchange reactions". Journal of Geophysical Research 117, D18306, doi:10.1029/2012JD017992.
- ↑ http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/ac5010579
- ↑ D. A. Stolper, A. L. Sessions, A. A. Ferreira, E. V. Santos Neto, A. Schimmelmann, S. S. Shusta, D. L. Valentine, J. M. Eiler Combined 13C–D and D–D clumping in methane: methods and preliminary results Geochem. Cosmochim. Acta, 126 (2014), pp. 169–191.
- ↑ Magyar, P. M., Orphan, V. J., and Eiler, J. M. (2016) Measurement of rare isotopologues of nitrous oxide by high-resolution multi-collector mass spectrometry. Rapid Commun. Mass Spectrom., 30: 1923–1940.
- ↑ Eiler, John M., et al. "A high-resolution gas-source isotope ratio mass spectrometer". International Journal of Mass Spectrometry 335 (2013): 45–56.
- ↑ 18O13C16O in Earth's atmosphere. J. M. Eiler, E. Schauble. Geochimica et cosmochimica acta 68 (23), 4767–4777.
- ↑ Urey, H. C., 1947. The thermodynamic properties of isotopic substances. J. Chem. Soc. London 1947, 561–581.
- ↑ Wang, Z., Schauble, E. A., Eiler, J. M., 2004. Equilibrium thermodynamics of multiply substituted isotopologues of molecular gases. Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta 68, 4779–4797.
- ↑ Yeung L. Y., Ash J. L., and Young E. D. (2015) Biological signatures in clumped isotopes of O2. Science 348, 431–434.
IUPAC, Compendium of Chemical Terminology, 2nd ed. (the "Gold Book") (1997). Online corrected version: (1994) "Isotopologue".
External links
- Fractional abundance of atmospheric isotopologues, SpectralCalc.com