Determination of Aluminium-26 in Biological Materials by Accelerator Mass Spectrometry
Abstract
Studies of the biological chemistry of aluminium can gain significantly from the use of the long-lived isotope 26Al as a tracer, although the cost of the isotope often precludes its determination by radiochemical counting techniques. Accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) provides an ultra-sensitive method of determination, free from isobaric interference from atomic (26Mg) or molecular species. The source materials for AMS can be aluminium oxide or phosphate, both of which can be readily prepared at a sufficient level of purity from biological substrates. Natural aluminium (27Al, 100%) is added to the preparations as a chemical yield monitor and to provide the reference for the isotope ratio measurement. 26Al/27Al ratios can be determined over the range 10–14–10–7, implying a limit of detection for 26Al of around 10–18 g. The precision of measurement and long-term reproducibility are <5% and <7% (RSD), respectively. Chemical methodologies for routine measurements on blood and urine samples have been developed.