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Dep. of Natural Resources and Environ. Sci., Univ. of Illinois, 1102 S. Goodwin Ave., Urbana, IL 61801
* Corresponding author (mulvaney{at}uiuc.edu)
A technique was developed that permits the use of boric acid-indicator solution in carrying out diffusions for inorganic 15N analysis of soil extracts by direct combustion, so as to eliminate the need for a separate quantitative determination. In this technique, the titrated sample is acidified with 2.5 M KHSO4 and subsequently treated with methanol to remove H3BO3. The NH+4-N is dissolved in 1 mL of deionized water, concentrated after transfer to a microcentrifuge tube, and freeze-dried in a tin capsule. Isotope-ratio analyses were accurate to within 5% when diffusions were performed on 100 to 1000 µg of NH+4-N (0.210 atom % 15N), whereas errors of 8 to 17% occurred with 25 to 50 µg of labeled N, even after correction for isotopic dilution by atmospheric NH3. The technique described permits 15N analysis of any form of N that can be recovered by H3BO3 diffusion of soil, soil extracts, soil hydrolysates, Kjeldahl digests, water, or wastewater.
Abbreviations: ANCA-MS, automated N/C analyzer-mass spectrometry LSD, least significant difference SD, standard deviation
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