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Introduction

Coulometer analysis determines carbonate concentration in a variety of samples, including pure carbonates, soils, rocks, and liquids. Coulometry quantifies the carbon dioxide evolved from acidified samples and uses this to determine the carbonate content in the original sample. The inorganic carbon value obtained from this method is used in conjunction with TC (total carbon) measurements from the CHNS to arrive at an organic carbon value.

Theory of Method

IODP's UIC Coulometrics CM5015 coulometer provides absolute determination of the concentration of carbon dioxide (CO2) evolved from an acidification process. The coulometer cell is filled with a proprietary solution containing monoethanolamine and a colorimetric pH indicator. A platinum cathode and silver anode are positioned in the cell, and the assembly is located between a light source and a photodetector. When a gas stream passes through the solution, CO2 is quantitatively absorbed, reacting with the monoethanolamine to form a titratable acid. This acid causes the color indicator to fade. A spectrophotometer monitors the change in the solution's percent transmittance (%T). As %T increases, the titration current is automatically adjusted to generate a base at a rate proportional to %T. When the solution returns to its original color (original %T), the current stops. The amount of CO2 evolved is quantitated from the duration and magnitude of the current required to balance the acid by CO2 evolution. Based on the principle of Faraday's Law of Electrolysis (the quantity of a substance produced by electrolysis is proportional to the quantity of electricity used), each mole of electrons added to the solution is equivalent to 1 mole of CO2 titrated.
Chemical reactions occurring in the coulometer cell follow:

  1. Absorption of CO2 by the cathode solution (cathode reaction):

CO2 + HOCH2CH2NH2 —> HOCH2CH2NHCOOH

  1. Electrochemical generation of OH (cathode reaction):

2H2O + 2e —> H2 (g) + 2OH

  1. Neutralization of absorbed CO2 reaction product by electrochemically generated OH:

HOCH2CH2NHCOOH + OH —> HOCH2CH2NHCOO + H2O

  1. Anode reaction:

AgO —> Ag+ + e

Interferences

A variety of carrier gases can be used for coulometry (O2, N2, He, and dry air); the JRSO uses N2 for the carrier gas. Interferences caused by compounds such as SO2, SO3, H2S, HCl, HBr, HI, and Cl2 are removed with KOH and AgNO3 scrubbers.

Apparatus, Reagents, & Materials

Hardware

  • Coulometer unit (UIC CM5015) with titration cell (Figure 1)
  • Acidification module (similar to UIC CM5030) (Figure 2)
  • Dual balance system, motion-compensated, with control software


Figure 1. Model CM5015 Coulometer.

Figure 2. Acidification Module.


Dual Balance System Hardware

A Cahn balance (Figure 3) and 2 Mettler Toledo XS204 (Figure 4) analytical balances with motion compensation software are used to measure the mass of samples and chemicals. The Cahn balance measures samples for the Coulometer and the Elemental Analyzer.


Figure 3. Cahn Electrobalance.


Figure 4. Mettler Toledo XS204.

Software

Dual Balance System Software

Motion compensation software developed in house allows the user to weigh the mass of chemicals and samples at sea. Reagents and samples >250 mg must be measured on the Mettler-Toledo XS204 balance (Figure 5). Reagents and samples ≤ 250 mg must be measured on the Cahn balance (Figure 6).


Figure 5. Mettler-Toledo Dual Balance Control Software.

Figure 6. Cahn Balance Control Software.

Laboratory Supplies

Apparatus

  • KOH pre-scrubber trap
  • AgNO3 post-scrubber trap
  • Reaction flask/reaction vial
  • Bottle-top dispenser, 5 mL
  • Agate mortar and pestle

Materials

  • Wax paper boats
  • Scoop
  • Tweezers
  • Sample containers

Reagents

  • Potassium hydroxide (KOH)
  • Silver nitrate (AgNO3)
  • Potassium iodide (KI)
  • Sulfuric acid (H2SO4)
  • Hydrochloric acid (HCl)
  • Anode solution (UIC proprietary)
  • Cathode solution (UIC proprietary)

Gases

  • Nitrogen (99.995% or better) is used as carrier gas to minimize the amount of CO2 the scrubber (KOH) must absorb

Reagent Solutions

  • 45% KOH ([%w/v]: add 90 g KOH pellets to water and make up to 200 mL once fully dissolved.
  • Warning!This procedure liberates caustic fumes and heat. Perform in a fume hood.)
  • 3% AgNO3 ([%w/v]: dissolve 3 g silver nitrate in water and make up to 100 mL when fully dissolved.)

  • 2N H2SO4: add 55.5 mL concentrated sulfuric acid to water and make up to 1L

  • 2N HCl: add 166 mL concentrated hydrochloric acid to water and make up to 1L


Sample Preparation

Liquid samples are pipetted directly into the sample tube. Most samples use 2 mL volume. If samples are suspected to contain high sulfur contents, use 0.5 mL.
Solid samples must be dried, ground, and weighed before introduction into the prepared Coulometer apparatus. The workflow for solid sample preparation is as follows:

  1. A scientist or staff member logs wet sample information into SampleMaster at the sampling table. The sample is given the name CARB to ensure proper routing.
  2. Freeze-dry the sample (Freeze-Drying the Sample).
  3. Homogenize (grind) the sample (Grinding the Sample).
  4. Weigh the sample, assign a container and code, and upload the mass data to LIMS (Weighing the Sample).
  5. Prepare the coulometer acidification for analysis (Preparing Acidification Module and Coulometer Cell).

Freeze-Drying the Sample

  1. Cut the sample bags or roll back the top to ensure an open orifice during the freeze-drying process.
  2. Place the sample in the freeze-drier in the Chemistry Lab under vacuum for 12 hr. If sample is finely divided and is clumpy, freeze-drying may take >12 hr. Sample should appear dry and powder easily (in mortar and pestle).
  3. Do not overload the freeze dryer.

Grinding the Sample

  1. Remove the freeze-dried sample from the sample bag and place in a mortar. If the sample volume is too large to be ground in the mortar, grind it in separate smaller portions and recombine.
  2. Grind the sample with a pestle to a fine, powder-like consistency with no large clumps. If the sample is too hard to grind in a mortar and pestle, use the mixer mill (see the X-ray technician for assistance in operating the mixer mill).
  3. Transfer the sample to a new bag or container.

Weighing the Sample

  1. Log into Cahn Balance software. The log-in is the same as the LIMS database ID.
  2. Select Coulometer. Set Measurement count to based on sea state. Scan the Text ID of the sample into the Text ID field. Enter the number of the vial into the Container number field.
  3. Fold a small piece of weighing paper (~3 cm x 2 cm) on opposite edges to create a weighing "boat". Place the paper boat on the left weighing pan. Place a similar size paper boat on the tare pan (right). Close the door and click Tare.
  4. Once the tare is finished, add the sample on the weighing pan (~11–13 mg) using a scoop. Observe the weight on the display on the balance, taking the tare value into account, until the weight is acceptable.
  5. Press Weigh on the screen. 
  6. Once the measurement is finished, write the mass in the coulometer notebook and click Save

Preparing Acidification Module and Coulometer Cell

  1. Add approximately 1/8- 1/4" layer of granular KI to the bottom of the side arm (small side, anode compartment) of the cell. The junction between the two compartments should be about halfway covered with KI. (Figure 7).
  2. Add a stir bar to large section (large side, cathode compartment) of the Carbon Coulometer Cell.
  3. Fill the large section of the Carbon Coulometer Cell with cathode solution to the 100mL line.
  4. Fill the small section of the Carbon Coulometer Cell with anode solution to just under the level of the cathode solution (about 20mL). Do this quickly (within 1 min) after filling the cathode cell, or else the cathode solution will start filtering through the junction between the cells and contaminate the anode solution.
  5. Press the cathode top on the cathode compartment and the anode top on the anode compartment. In the anode compartment, make sure the electrode is in the solution but not in contact with the granular KI.
  6. Fill the KOH pre-scrubber trap 1/2 full of 45% KOH solution.
  7. Fill the AgNO3 post-scrubber trap 1/2 full of 3% AgNO3 solution.
  8. Add 3 drops of 2N H2SO4 to the AgNO3 trap.
  9. Attach the input gas tube (carrier gas inlet) to the KOH trap.
  10. Turn on the gas flow and set to 100 cm3/min.
  11. Connect the KOH trap to the reaction flask.
  12. Connect the reaction flask to the thinner side of the AgNO3 trap.
  13. Connect the top of the AgNO3 trap to the Carbon Coulometer Cell (through the line entering the back of the Coulometer

Connect the anode/cathode to the titration cell ports next to the titration cell (Figure 8).
Figure 7. Acidification Module and Carbon Coulometer Cell.
Level of granular KI

Figure 8. Titration cell ports.

Sample Analysis

Once the sample is placed in the reaction vial, acid is added to release CO2 gas. This gas is carried through the coulometer cell and into the titration cell, where the sample is titrated by the coulometer automatically and the software plots µg carbon vs. time. The software evaluates the slope of the plot against a drift threshold and then compares the slope against $Threshold_slope (method-determined value equivalent to 29% transmittance) to determine when the titration is complete. When the threshold is reached, titration halts and the final result is expressed in µg C, from which weight percent (wt%) CaCO3 can be calculated.

Running Samples

Prepare the coulometer cell, place it in the coulometer and connect the leads before turning on power. 

  1. Turn on the heating unit and power to the main coulometer unit.
  2. Choose Emulation Mode on the screen.


  1. Click Run Cell Setup on the screen.

  1. On the transmittance screen that appears, check to see that the value is between 2,700 and 4,000. If not, swivel the carbon coulometer cell until a value in this range is acquired. Do not move the cell once this position has been found.

  1. Click Next.
  2. Click Start Analysis. The Cell Activity screen will appear. The %T should be between 99.8-100.1 and the Cell I should be 0.0.

  1. Switch the cell to On on the main coulometer unit.
  2. Allow the cell to equilibrate for 30-45 minutes before continuing. The %T should be 29.6 and steady.
  3. Open the Coulometer software and log in.
  4. Heat the vial with the weighed standard (100% CaCO3) in the heating unit for 2-3 minutes before measuring.
  5. Attach the top of the reaction cell to the sample vial. Bubbles should appear in the pre and post scrubber traps. If not, make sure all connections are tight.
  6. Select the sample from the list you wish to measure on the Coulometer software (Figure 9).





Figure 9. Coulometer Software

  1. Then slowly add 5 mL of 2N HCl using the connected repeater dispensette.
  2. Quickly press Measure in the sample list page of the coulometer software. If the measurement is delayed the results may underestimate the calcium carbonate percentage. A measurement screen will appear displaying real time data acquisition, the options to abort or stop the measurement, and to save/not save the results. The slope threshold is a measurement of the µg carbon with respect to time, and may be adjusted to specify the stopping point of the titration. Setting the slope threshold too low increases measurement times with the possibility of including circuit noise in the results, whereas setting the threshold too high will cause the measurement to prematurely terminate. The default slope threshold is 0.1.
  3. Once measuring is complete, click Save and record the %CaCO3, % carbon, and carbon mass in the log book. The %CaCO3 standard should give a %CaCO3 value of 100%. See the technician if this value is not acquired after running 3 standards.
  4. Wait 10-15 minutes for the system to restabilize between samples.
  5. Repeat steps 10-16 for the samples.

Shutting Down the Coulometer

Shut down the instrument after each run.

  1. Turn off cell power, unit power, and heater power.
  2. Unplug the electrodes and remove the titration cell.
  3. Place the appropriate jumper between the red and black cell output fittings.
  4. Remove all traps and dispose of solutions appropriately.
  5. Rinse/dry all glassware.

Cleaning the Glassware

  • Sample tubes: rinse sample tubes with DI water and place into the oven to dry. They do not need to be acid washed.
  • Carbon Coulometer Cell: Clean the cathode/anode cell in a fume hood by adding acetone to the anode cell. The acetone will leach through the bridge between the cells and clean it. Follow the acetone rinse by placing DI water in the anode cell and letting that leach through.
  • Platinum electrodes: Electrodes can acquire surface coatings from the solutions. Remove this coating by placing the electrode in a concentrated nitric acid solution for 1 hr.
  • AgNO3 post-scrubber trap: Clean the post-scrubber trap by adding ammonium hydroxide to the trap and letting it sit in the fume hood for about 24 hours.

Data Handling

Weight percent calcium carbonate is calculated from µg carbon measured during the titration as follows:
%CaCO3 = µg C x 8.333/sample mass
Sample mass is stored in LIMS associated with the container ID that the coulometer analysis is associated with.

Quality Assurance/Quality Control

QA/QC for Coulometer analysis consists of instrument calibration and continuing calibration verification using check standards, along with blanks and replicate samples.

Range and Rate

The working range of the CO2 coulometer is 0.01 µg to 100mg C. . The coulometer cell solution can absorb >100 mg of C. Titrating at maximum current (200 mA), the coulometer can titrate 1500 µg of carbon (or 5500 µg CO2{~}) per min.

Analytical Batch

An analytical batch is a method-defined number of samples with which QC samples including calibration verification, blank check, and replicate samples are run. Because samples are grouped into QC batches, if problems arise, affected samples can be identified and reanalyzed. Analytical batches for the coulometer are typically 10 samples.

Control Limits

Each QA/QC sample has one the following results:

  • In Control
  • In Control (exceeds warning limit
  • Out of Control (exceeds control limit)

For a system to be considered in control, all QA/QC samples (blanks, calibration verification [CV] standards, and replicate samples) must be in control.



In Control

A QA/QC sample is in control when the sample analysis result is within a certain tolerance of acceptable limits (usually 1¿). Calibration verification standards should be within acceptable limits of the actual value of carbonate, blanks should be within acceptable limits of background levels of carbonate, and replicate samples should be within acceptable limits of precision. When the system is in control, as indicated by acceptable results on QA/QC samples, analytical results for unknown samples are considered to be reliable.

In Control (Warning Limit Exceeded)

When QA/QC samples exceed the warning limits (generally 2¿ but ¿ to 3¿¿, the system is considered to be in danger of becoming out of control (but is not yet out of control). Typically, the warning situation indicates that the operator must decide whether to take action. The operator can continue the analysis if he or she does not think that the control limit will be exceeded.

Out of Control

If the control limits are exceeded (generally 3¿), the instrument system is considered out of control and all samples in the current analytical batch are invalid and should be reanalyzed once corrective action has been taken to put the system back in control.

Blanks

A blank is run every N (defined by method) samples. The blank result is evaluated against $CL, the method-defined percent threshold that the measured blank value can deviate from standard value and still be considered in control, and $WL, the method-defined percent threshold that the measured blank value can deviate from the standard value before setting a warning flag.

  • If the blank result is <$WL and <$CL, the system is in control and analysis can continue.
  • If the blank result is >$WL and <$CL, the system is flagged with warning limits, although analyses can proceed.
  • If the blank result is >$CL, the system is out of control and samples in the analytical batch (between the previous blank and the current blank) are invalid and must be rerun.

Calibration

The Coulometer instrument electronics are calibrated by the manufacturer. Each time the reagents are changed a calibration curve is constructed by running the following standards:

  • Blank: 0% CaCO3
  • STD 1: standard level to bracket the lower end of expected sample value range
  • STD 2: standard level to bracket upper end of expected sample value range
  • CaCO3: 100% CaCO3

The calibration curve is calculated using linear fit, least-squares method as measured CaCO3 vs. STD CaCO3:

Variable

Calculation

y = STD_CaCO3

(mass_C_std/mass_std) x (100.087/12) x 100% = 834% x mass_C_std/mass_std

m = slope

(STD_CaCO3/Sample_CaCO3)

b = intercept

STD_CaCO3

x = meas_CaCO3

(mass_C_sample/mass_sample) x (100.087/12) x 100% = 834% x mass_C_sample/mass_sample

y = mx + b

(834% x mass_C_std/mass_std) = m x (834% x mass_C_sample/mass_sample) + b

A transfer function relates measured µg carbon from the instrument to normalized %CaCO3. This transfer function is applied to all measurements in the range for which the calibration is valid.

Calibration Verification

A check standard is run every 6 hr of Coulometer instrument operation or every 10 samples (whichever comes first). Check standards consist of a 100% CaCO3 standard (reagent grade calcium carbonate).
The check standard result is evaluated against the threshold for %variance limits for calibration verification standard ($X) against true value as follows:
(834% x mass_C_normal/mass_normal) = m x (834% x mass_C_check/mass_check) + b
(834% x mass_C_normal/mass_normal) = normalized%CaCO3_

  • If the check standard $X >1%, then rerun the standard.
  • If the check standard $X >1% on the rerun, then change the reagent solution, recalibrate the instrument, and rerun all samples in the corresponding analytical batch.
  • If the check standard rerun falls within actual value ±1%, then run the check standard again to determine one of the following:
  • If the verification check standard run falls within actual value ±1% then the check standard is considered successful and analysis can continue.
  • If the verification check standard $X >1%, then change the reagent solutions, recalibrate the instrument, and rerun all samples in the corresponding analytical batch.

Precision

Every N (defined by method) samples, a single sample is analyzed in replicate. The deviation between the two sample results is evaluated against $CL, the method-defined maximum percent deviation allowable for the precision to be considered in control, and $WL, the method-defined percent deviation allowable for the precision before setting a warning flag.

  • If precision is <$WL and <$CL, the system is in control and analysis can continue.
  • If precision is >$WL and <$CL, the system is flagged with warning limits, although analyses can proceed.
  • If precision is >$CL, the system is out of control and samples in the analytical batch are invalid and must be rerun.

Accuracy

Typical accuracy using the UIC Coulometer is as follows:

  • Carbonate carbon in calcium carbonate: 12.00%/12.00% ± 0.05%
  • Titration accuracy is ±0.15% in samples with >1000 µg C.
  • If sample volume limits CO2 evolution to small amounts, accuracy is better than ~1 µg C.

LIMS Integration

Sample Characteristics

  • Analysis is typically performed on a homogenized powdered subsample
  • Sample type can be homogenized powder or aqueous
  • Analysis is destructive

Analysis Characteristics

Weight Analysis

Data have the following dependencies on weight analysis:

  • Mass of carbonate sample (measured)
  • Container ID (directly input)

Coulometer Analysis

The following analysis components are uploaded from the coulometer into the LIMS with each sample result:

  • Sample ID
  • Instrument serial number
  • Analysis timestamp
  • µg carbon measured (measured)
  • Slope threshold
  • Analysis duration
  • Method reference
  • Calibration information
  • Slope (m)
  • Intercept (b)
  • R2
  • Timestamp

LIMS Analysis Components


Analysis

Component

Definition

Unit

COUL

calcium_carbonate_percent

Concentration of CaCO3 in sample

wt%


carbon_mass

Mass of carbon in sample

µg


carbon_percent

Concentration of carbon in sample

wt%


container_number




mass

Mass of sample

mg

COUL_QAQC

calcium_carbonate_expected_percent

Concentration of CaCO3 expected in standard

wt%


calcium_carbonate_percent

Concentration of CaCO3 in sample

wt%


carbon_expected_mass

Mass of carbon expected in a standard

µg


carbon_expected_percent

Concentration of carbon expected in standard

wt%


carbon_mass

Mass of carbon found in standard

µg


carbon_percent

Percent carbon found in standard

wt%


container_number




corr2

Correlation coefficient R2



intercept




mass

Mass of sample

mg


slope




standard_percent

Percent of carbon expected in standard as determined from standard

wt#


Health, Safety, & Environment

Safety

Carbon Cathode Solution (CM300-001)

–Hazardous components: Dimethyl sulfoxide, Monoethanolamine, Tetraethylammonium bromide (TEAB)
–Hazards:

  • Inhalation: irritant; TEAB toxic
  • Absorption: irritant; TEAB toxic/potential mutagen
  • Ingestion: TEAB toxic

–Handling: absorbs CO2; keep tightly closed.
–Storage: keep away from oxidizers, heat, and ignition sources
–PPE: gloves, safety glasses
–Reactivity: stable; incompatible with oxidizers, acids, alkali metals, CO2

Carbon Anode Solution (CM300-0002)

–Hazardous components: Dimethyl sulfoxide, potassium iodide
–Hazards:

  • Inhalation: irritant
  • Absorption: irritant

–Storage: keep away from heat/ignition sources and oxidizing agents
–PPE: gloves, safety glasses
–Reactivity: stable; incompatible with oxidizers, acids, alkali metals, CO

Potassium Iodide (CM300-003)

–Hazards:

  • Inhalation: irritant
  • Absorption: irritant
  • Ingestion: irritant

–Incompatible materials: alkaloid salts, chloral hydrate, potassium chlorate, metallic salts, tartaric and other acids, bromine trifluoride, fluorine perchlorate

Waste Management

Waste may be washed down drain with flowing water.

Maintenance/Troubleshooting and Parts/Consumables

For maintenance and troubleshooting or parts and consumables, see the Coulometer User Guide.

Archive Version

LMUG-CoulometerQuickStartGuide-230220-1901-140.pdf