Biogeochemical cycle of chromium isotopes at the modern Earth's surface and its applications as a paleo-environment proxy

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftReviewForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Biogeochemical cycle of chromium isotopes at the modern Earth's surface and its applications as a paleo-environment proxy. / Wei, Wei; Klaebe, Robert; Ling, Hong-Fei; Huang, Fang; Frei, Robert.

I: Chemical Geology, Bind 541, 119570, 20.05.2020.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftReviewForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Wei, W, Klaebe, R, Ling, H-F, Huang, F & Frei, R 2020, 'Biogeochemical cycle of chromium isotopes at the modern Earth's surface and its applications as a paleo-environment proxy', Chemical Geology, bind 541, 119570. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemgeo.2020.119570

APA

Wei, W., Klaebe, R., Ling, H-F., Huang, F., & Frei, R. (2020). Biogeochemical cycle of chromium isotopes at the modern Earth's surface and its applications as a paleo-environment proxy. Chemical Geology, 541, [119570]. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemgeo.2020.119570

Vancouver

Wei W, Klaebe R, Ling H-F, Huang F, Frei R. Biogeochemical cycle of chromium isotopes at the modern Earth's surface and its applications as a paleo-environment proxy. Chemical Geology. 2020 maj 20;541. 119570. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemgeo.2020.119570

Author

Wei, Wei ; Klaebe, Robert ; Ling, Hong-Fei ; Huang, Fang ; Frei, Robert. / Biogeochemical cycle of chromium isotopes at the modern Earth's surface and its applications as a paleo-environment proxy. I: Chemical Geology. 2020 ; Bind 541.

Bibtex

@article{b205442fd2a94a8f8f9d15cfc6a146f3,
title = "Biogeochemical cycle of chromium isotopes at the modern Earth's surface and its applications as a paleo-environment proxy",
abstract = "Chromium (Cr) is a redox-sensitive metal element with two natural oxidation states, commonly as the soluble Cr (VI) oxyanion (CrO4 2− or HCrO4 −) and the insoluble Cr (III)-compounds. Over past two decades, developments in mass spectrometric techniques make mass-dependent Cr isotope fractionation during Cr redox reactions, Cr (III) oxidation and abiotic/biotic Cr (VI) reduction, as well as other redox-independent processes detectable. This could help identify a range of magnitudes of Cr isotope fractionation observed during terrestrial Cr mobilization, riverine transport of Cr into estuary systems, oceanic Cr cycling, and Cr sinks into sediments, and understand how Cr isotopes biogeochemically cycle at the modern Earth's surface. Based on this framework, the stable Cr isotope system is increasingly used as a paleo-environmental proxy to trace the oxygenation history of the atmosphere-hydrosphere system. In this contribution, we focus on reviewing analytical methods of stable Cr isotopes, mass-dependent Cr isotope fractionation factors determined by laboratory experiments, the biogeochemical cycle of Cr isotopes at the modern Earth's surface, and its applications as a paleo-environmental proxy, in the nearly twenty-year development. Despite several outstanding uncertainties, the stable Cr isotope system shows great promise as a powerful monitor of atmospheric and oceanic oxygenation.",
keywords = "Biogeochemical cycle, Mass-dependent fractionation, Paleo-environmental proxy, Stable Cr isotopes",
author = "Wei Wei and Robert Klaebe and Hong-Fei Ling and Fang Huang and Robert Frei",
year = "2020",
month = may,
day = "20",
doi = "10.1016/j.chemgeo.2020.119570",
language = "English",
volume = "541",
journal = "Chemical Geology",
issn = "0009-2541",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Biogeochemical cycle of chromium isotopes at the modern Earth's surface and its applications as a paleo-environment proxy

AU - Wei, Wei

AU - Klaebe, Robert

AU - Ling, Hong-Fei

AU - Huang, Fang

AU - Frei, Robert

PY - 2020/5/20

Y1 - 2020/5/20

N2 - Chromium (Cr) is a redox-sensitive metal element with two natural oxidation states, commonly as the soluble Cr (VI) oxyanion (CrO4 2− or HCrO4 −) and the insoluble Cr (III)-compounds. Over past two decades, developments in mass spectrometric techniques make mass-dependent Cr isotope fractionation during Cr redox reactions, Cr (III) oxidation and abiotic/biotic Cr (VI) reduction, as well as other redox-independent processes detectable. This could help identify a range of magnitudes of Cr isotope fractionation observed during terrestrial Cr mobilization, riverine transport of Cr into estuary systems, oceanic Cr cycling, and Cr sinks into sediments, and understand how Cr isotopes biogeochemically cycle at the modern Earth's surface. Based on this framework, the stable Cr isotope system is increasingly used as a paleo-environmental proxy to trace the oxygenation history of the atmosphere-hydrosphere system. In this contribution, we focus on reviewing analytical methods of stable Cr isotopes, mass-dependent Cr isotope fractionation factors determined by laboratory experiments, the biogeochemical cycle of Cr isotopes at the modern Earth's surface, and its applications as a paleo-environmental proxy, in the nearly twenty-year development. Despite several outstanding uncertainties, the stable Cr isotope system shows great promise as a powerful monitor of atmospheric and oceanic oxygenation.

AB - Chromium (Cr) is a redox-sensitive metal element with two natural oxidation states, commonly as the soluble Cr (VI) oxyanion (CrO4 2− or HCrO4 −) and the insoluble Cr (III)-compounds. Over past two decades, developments in mass spectrometric techniques make mass-dependent Cr isotope fractionation during Cr redox reactions, Cr (III) oxidation and abiotic/biotic Cr (VI) reduction, as well as other redox-independent processes detectable. This could help identify a range of magnitudes of Cr isotope fractionation observed during terrestrial Cr mobilization, riverine transport of Cr into estuary systems, oceanic Cr cycling, and Cr sinks into sediments, and understand how Cr isotopes biogeochemically cycle at the modern Earth's surface. Based on this framework, the stable Cr isotope system is increasingly used as a paleo-environmental proxy to trace the oxygenation history of the atmosphere-hydrosphere system. In this contribution, we focus on reviewing analytical methods of stable Cr isotopes, mass-dependent Cr isotope fractionation factors determined by laboratory experiments, the biogeochemical cycle of Cr isotopes at the modern Earth's surface, and its applications as a paleo-environmental proxy, in the nearly twenty-year development. Despite several outstanding uncertainties, the stable Cr isotope system shows great promise as a powerful monitor of atmospheric and oceanic oxygenation.

KW - Biogeochemical cycle

KW - Mass-dependent fractionation

KW - Paleo-environmental proxy

KW - Stable Cr isotopes

U2 - 10.1016/j.chemgeo.2020.119570

DO - 10.1016/j.chemgeo.2020.119570

M3 - Review

AN - SCOPUS:85081121520

VL - 541

JO - Chemical Geology

JF - Chemical Geology

SN - 0009-2541

M1 - 119570

ER -

ID: 242514988