Dear all, As a postscript to Steve's comments, I ordered a similar 2.5 purity tank of CO from Praxair, but it turned out to have a very light composition. I received my CO from a Las Vegas distribution centre, so it's almost certainly a different lot number. Hence, by ordering CO in the US, you might get lucky, and then again, you might not! Cheers, Simon > For what it's worth, we recently received a EuroVector EA and needed >some CO quickly in order to set it up and test it for oxygen pyrolysis. >The only thing we could come up with quickly was a 2.5 purity tank from >Praxair. To our surprise it had a very low background for water and O2 and >not much of anything else showed up in the background scans. In addition, >it turned out to have a very workable d18O value of around +17 per mil. >The delta value is just a rough estimate based on the value we get for our >nitrate oxygen standard but it's certainly not off by hundreds of per mil. >I have no idea if lower purity CO normally has such a workable oxygen >composition or we were just lucky. If it's the rule rather than the >exception, maybe lower purity CO could be scrubbed for contaminants in the >lab. The Micromass engineer who installed our instrument thought he >remembered someone else having the same experience. > >Steven Silva >U.S. Geological Survey ***** Simon R. Poulson Dept. of Geological Sciences, MS-172 University of Nevada-Reno Reno, NV 89557-0138 USA Phone: (775) 784-1104 Fax: (775) 784-1833 [log in to unmask] *****