Developing a new method for analyzing carbonate-associated phosphate through inductively coupled plasma-tandem mass spectrometry (ICP-MS/MS)
Abstract
Phosphorus, a critical biogeochemical element regulating marine productivity, poses analytical challenges in carbonate matrices using conventional spectrophotometric methods. This study establishes novel analytical protocols employing inductively coupled plasma-tandem mass spectrometry (ICP-MS/MS) with oxygen reaction mode and argon gas dilution (AGD)-ICP-MS/MS for simultaneous quantification of carbonate-associated phosphate (CAP) and rare earth elements plus yttrium (REE + Y). Through systematic optimization, we implemented a 2% v/v acetic acid partial leaching protocol for CAP extraction. Comparative evaluation of collision/reaction cell modes revealed that the triple quadrupole configuration with O2 reaction gas mode (TQ-O2) demonstrated superior interference elimination capabilities, particularly effective in resolving the [14N16O1H]+ isobaric interference on 31P+ (with a mass shift to m/z 47 for [31P16O]+). The developed methods achieved detection limits of 0.15 μg L−1 (ICP-MS/MS) and 2.56 μg L−1 (AGD-ICP-MS/MS) for phosphorus, with good determination coefficient (R2 > 0.999). Method validation using four geochemical certified reference materials (JDo-1, AGV-2, BHVO-2 and BCR-2) demonstrated excellent agreement with certified values. The CAP/(Ca + Mg) ratios for JDo-1, SRM 1d, and GBW07108 were determined to provide interlaboratory comparative information. This multi-parameter analytical framework provides enhanced throughput for paleoceanographic studies requiring coupled nutrient (P) and redox proxy (REE + Y) analysis.