Comparative determination of rhenium isotopes in geological reference materials with and without HF-desilicification
Abstract
The utilization of rhenium (Re) mass fractions or isotopes (δ187Re, reported relative to SRM 3143) as a high-sensitivity geochemical tracer has advanced substantially in the past decade, driven by its unique redox-controlled mass-dependent fractionation behavior spanning low- to high-temperature geological processes and systems. Current analytical protocols mainly employ HCl–HNO3 digestion without desilicification for Re mass fraction analysis and HF–HNO3 digestion with complete desilicification for δ187ReSRM 3143 analysis, the latter procedure ensuring quantitative Re liberation but concurrently introducing potential interfering elements. In this study, we developed a novel and simple chromatographic separation protocol making use of HCl–HNO3 and HF–HNO3 mixtures to obtain pure Re fractions for analysis of silicate-hosted Re contributions to bulk δ187ReSRM 3143 signatures. The Re isotope ratio of the purified fraction was determined by multi-collector inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometer (MC-ICP-MS) employing a calibration model combining sample-standard bracketing with internal normalization (C-SSBIN). The robustness and reliability of the newly developed separation procedure was validated through analysis of certified reference materials digested by HF–HNO3, including BCR-2, TDB-1 and OKUM, showing good agreement with literature data. Comparative analysis of non-desilicified reference materials (WPR-1a, OKUM, TDB-1, BHVO-2, AGV-2) revealed δ187ReSRM 3143 discrepancies ≤ 0.07‰ (intermediate precision) despite the presence of >10% silicate-bound Re, demonstrating that HF-desilicification is not a necessary operation for Re isotope analysis. This finding suggests that sample mass can be increased to obtain sufficient Re for high-precision isotope measurement. Our separation procedure can be applied to various types of samples regardless of their Re mass fractions. Additionally, the δ187ReSRM 3143 of the sulfur-rich peridotite WPR-1a (first reported here) shows relatively lower values compared to other silicate reference materials, implying that redox processes can induce Re isotope fractionation.