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Published May 2013 | public
Journal Article

The Isotopic Anatomies of Molecules and Minerals

Eiler, John M.

Abstract

Most natural compounds are composed of diverse isotopologues that differ in the number and/or symmetrically unique atomic locations of isotopic substitutions. Little of this isotopic diversity is observed by conventional methods of stable isotope geochemistry, which generally measure concentrations of rare isotopes without constraining differences in isotopic composition between different atomic sites or nonrandom probabilities of multiple isotopic substitutions in the same molecule. Recent advances in analytical instrumentation and methodology have created a set of geochemical tools— geothermometers, biosynthetic signatures, forensic fingerprints—based on these position-specific isotope effects and multiply substituted isotopologues. This progress suggests we are entering a period in which many new geochemical tools of this type will be created. This review describes the principles, background, analytical methods, existing applied tools, and likely future progress of this emerging field.

Additional Information

© 2013 Annual Reviews. This review benefited from discussions with many current and former members of the Caltech laboratories for geochemistry, particularly Alex Sessions, Jess Adkins, Matthieu Clog, Daniel Stolper, Alison Piasecki, and Paul Magyar, and the engineering staff of Thermo's Bremen mass spectrometry group. Matthieu Clog performed the mass scan of CO2 illustrated in Figure 3 of this paper. Thanks also go to Nathaniel David for suggesting the term "isotomics" as a catch-all phrase describing the information content of molecular isotopic diversity. This work benefited from funding from the National Science Foundation, Caltech, and Petrobras.

Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 24, 2023