Hi Charlotte, If your purifier is the heated type, restoring power to it is going to release a bunch of junk downstream. Just something to think about if the system was ever open to it before you did this calibration. Also, the slope in my 13C normalizations has ranged from 0.94 to 1.05 depending on the run so I don't know if your slope estimate is really that bad. I'd make sure you have multiple points spanning the broadest range of deltas, all at similar amplitude. For EA work, I haven't noticed any problems in std on offs or precision of replicates when water is around 3V. How is the precision of your CO2 on-offs in this conflo and any other reference splits? I wonder how clean your tank is. Cheers, Ben Harlow Washington State University Stable Isotope Core Laboratory -----Original Message----- From: Stable Isotope Geochemistry [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Charlotte Lehmann Sent: Monday, February 05, 2007 7:53 AM To: [log in to unmask] Subject: [ISOGEOCHEM] slope of standard curve for d13C I recently ran NIST standards to develop a new standard curve for d13C bulk isotopes on our Delta V and am wondering to what to attribute the fact that the slope is less than 1.0. This time it was 0.93, resulting in enriched values that are much more enriched than they were six months ago. We have a new tank of Scientific CO2 for the reference gas, and it appears to have a d13C value of about -39.4 per mil (whereas our previous tank from the same supplier was -22 per mil). Any suggestions? Also, and I don't know if this is contributing to the above, we have a fair amount of water hanging around as evidenced by Mass 18 values in the several thousand mV range, with no indication of leaks (Mass 40 is low). I just discovered that the gas purifier on the GC-GCC III side had a blown fuse. But the problem is evident on the EA-Conflo III side of things and we have never used a gas purifier there and not had this problem before to my recollection. Heaters are on at the valves and the source. We already replaced the needle valves with Nupro valves. Spent some time running diagnostics last week: focus is good; linearity checks out. Amplifier test passes (although I can't pick the gas configuration to use because it only sees "CO" which we do not routinely use. Peak shape and flatness are good. System stability is excellent. Signal stability (on CO2) seems to be 2.5 times what the manual says it should be; not sure what that means or how to correct it... I'll be interested to hear any ideas! -- Charlotte Lehmann Research Technician Bates College Department of Geology 206A Carnegie Science Building 44 Campus Avenue Lewiston, ME 04240 Phone: 207-786-6485 FAX: 207-786-8334