1. Introduction
The pores in snow contain atmospheric air that transforms to preserved-air bubbles when the pores close off. These air bubbles in an ice core are the only known paleoenvironmental archive of the actual ancient atmosphere with a time axis in the depth direction. For the orbital dating of ice cores, the composition ratio of oxygen (O2) to nitrogen (N2) is useful because it correlates with fluctuations in local summer insolation (e.g. Bender, Reference Bender2002; Kawamura and others, Reference Kawamura, Parrenin, Lisiecki, Uemura and Vimeux2007; Suwa and Bender, Reference Suwa and Bender2008a, Reference Suwa and Benderb; Landais and others, Reference Landais, Dreyfus, Capron, Pol and Loutre2012; Bazin and others, Reference Bazin, Landais, Lemieux-Dudon, Toyé Mahamadou Kele and Veres2013, Reference Bazin, Landais, Capron, Masson-Delmotte and Ritz2016). In particular, summer insolation may influence certain physical properties of snow that control the magnitude of close-off fractionation (Bender, Reference Bender2002; Kawamura and others, Reference Kawamura, Parrenin, Lisiecki, Uemura and Vimeux2007; Fujita and others, Reference Fujita, Okuyama, Hori and Hondoh2009).
Greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane (CH4) are trace components in the atmosphere, and their past atmospheric concentrations can only be known from the analysis of deep ice cores. Their concentrations correlate strongly with past global climate, so they are an important part of the ice-core analysis (e.g. Barnola and others, Reference Barnola, Raynaud, Korotkevich and Lorius1988; Kobashi and others, Reference Kobashi, Severinghaus, Brook, Barnola and Grachev2007; Chappellaz and others, Reference Chappellaz, Stowasser, Blunier, Baslev-Clausen and Brook2013). Analyses of noble gases such as argon (Ar), krypton (Kr), and xenon (Xe) have been attracting attention because their elemental and isotopic ratios can be used to reconstruct various environmental parameters such as the temperature changes in the firn or ocean (e.g. Severinghaus and others, Reference Severinghaus, Sowers, Brook, Alley and Bender1998; Severinghaus, Reference Severinghaus1999; Kobashi and others, Reference Kobashi, Severinghaus and Barnola2008a, Reference Kobashi, Severinghaus and Kawamurab, Reference Kobashi, Ikeda-Fukazawa, Suwa, Shwander and Kameda2015; Orsi and others, Reference Orsi, Cornuelle and Severinghaus2014, Reference Orsi, Kawamura, Masson-Delmotte, Fettweis and Box2017; Bereiter and others., Reference Bereiter, Shackleton, Baggenstos, Kawamura and Severinghaus2018). Also, the 40Ar/38Ar ratio can be used for dating very old ice, based on the increasing rate of atmospheric 40Ar over a million-year timescale (Bender and others, Reference Bender, Barnett, Dreyfus, Jouzel and Porcelli2008).
As they descend deeper, the loading pressure causes the air bubbles to shrink. Below a certain depth, the temperature and pressure are sufficient for them to transform to air-hydrate crystals. During this phase change, the molecule with the lower dissociation pressure at the same temperature is enclathrated at a higher concentration than that in the original air in the bubble. In the ice sheet, the guest fractionation in air-hydrate crystals is enhanced by the different permeation rates of air molecules (N2, O2, Ar, …) in the ice matrix (Ikeda and others, Reference Ikeda, Fukazawa, Mae, Pepin and Duval1999; Ikeda-Fukazawa and others, Reference Ikeda-Fukazawa, Hondoh, Fukumura, Fukazawa and Mae2001; Salamatin and others, Reference Salamatin, Lipenkov, Ikeda-Fukazawa and Hondoh2001, Reference Salamatin, Lipenkov and Hondoh2003). For example, of the N2 and O2 components, the O2 concentration becomes higher in the air-hydrate crystals than that in bubbles in the bubble-to-air hydrate transition zone (BHTZ), which has been identified by Raman spectroscopy as the change of the peak intensity ratio between O2 and N2 (Nakahara and others, Reference Nakahara, Shigesato, Higashi, Hondoh and Langway1988; Ikeda and others, Reference Ikeda, Fukazawa, Mae, Pepin and Duval1999; Ikeda-Fukazawa and others, Reference Ikeda-Fukazawa, Hondoh, Fukumura, Fukazawa and Mae2001). This bubble–air hydrate fractionation effect would be caused by the dissociation pressure of O2 hydrate is lower than that of N2 hydrate (about 6.5 MPa vs 9 MPa at −20 °C, Miller, Reference Miller1969) and the permeation effect of O2 in ice matrix is larger than that of N2 (Salamatin and others, Reference Salamatin, Lipenkov, Ikeda-Fukazawa and Hondoh2001; Ikeda-Fukazawa and others, Reference Ikeda-Fukazawa2005; Oyabu and others, Reference Oyabu, Kawamura, Uchida, Fujita and Kitamurain review, 2021).
Argon forms a gas hydrate with a dissociation pressure of about 5 MPa at −20°C (Nagashima, and others, Reference Nagashima, Nemoto and Ohmura2018), which is below those of N2 and O2 hydrates (Fig. 1). Thus, Ar might be selectively enclathrated into air-hydrate crystals. In addition, as N2, O2, and Ar all form the type II crystal structure of clathrate hydrates (Davidson, and others, Reference Davidson, Handa, Ratcliffe, Tse and Powell1984; Hondoh and others, Reference Hondoh1990), these gases can be enclathrated in the same type of crystal structure.
Atmospheric components in ice cores are usually measured by extracting all air from the ice by either melting or by physically destroying the bulk ice core sample (100 g or less). Concerning Ar, detailed analyses of firn air and ice cores have found Ar subject to size-dependent and mass-dependent fractionation during the close-off and post-coring gas loss (Bender and others, Reference Bender, Sowers and Lipenkov1995; Huber and others, Reference Huber, Beyerle, Leuenberger, Schwander and Kipfer2006; Severinghaus and Battle, Reference Severinghaus and Battle2006; Severinghaus and others, Reference Severinghaus, Beaudette, Headly, Taylor and Brook2009; Kobashi and others, Reference Kobashi, Ikeda-Fukazawa, Suwa, Shwander and Kameda2015; Oyabu and others, Reference Oyabu, Kawamura, Uchida, Fujita and Kitamurain review, 2021). At depths below the bubble–air-hydrate transition zone, Ar is considered to be included in air-hydrate crystals, but has yet to be confirmed directly by microscopic analysis. Such direct observation of Ar is difficult because it has a very small mixing ratio. Moreover, Ar is an inert gas, which makes it difficult to measure by the common spectroscopic methods used for N2 and O2. Also, little is known about the movement of Ar in the ice matrix, with only a few published simulations (Ikeda-Fukazawa and others, Reference Ikeda-Fukazawa, Kawamura and Hondoh2004; Kobashi and others, Reference Kobashi, Ikeda-Fukazawa, Suwa, Shwander and Kameda2015) and experiments (e.g. Satoh and others, Reference Satoh, Uchida, Hondoh and Mae1996). By identifying the presence and dynamics of Ar in the ice sheet, the accuracy of ice-core analysis should be further improved.
Here, we examine sections of the ice core retrieved at NEEM, Greenland, applying scanning electron microscopy (SEM) to five air-hydrate crystals in the deep ice. By analyzing the Ar signal from energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDS) of the air-hydrate crystals, we argue that Ar exists in the air-hydrate crystals of deep ice cores.
Based on our discovery, we will be able to analyze the gas distribution in ice sheets. For example, the data on N2/O2 fractionation in the transition zone obtained with Raman spectra measurements (Ikeda and others, Reference Ikeda, Fukazawa, Mae, Pepin and Duval1999; Ikeda-Fukazawa and others, Reference Ikeda-Fukazawa, Hondoh, Fukumura, Fukazawa and Mae2001) were used to constrain mathematical models describing the formation and growth of air-hydrate crystals in ice sheets and to estimate the permeation coefficients of N2 and O2 molecules in ice (Salamatin and others, Reference Salamatin, Lipenkov, Ikeda-Fukazawa and Hondoh2001, Reference Salamatin, Lipenkov and Hondoh2003), later on these estimates of permeation coefficients were used to simulate the diffusive smoothing of the delta O2/N2 orbital signal in old ice (e.g. Oyabu and others, Reference Oyabu, Kawamura, Uchida, Fujita and Kitamurain review, 2021). Knowledge of permeation coefficients (including that of Ar) is also important for assessing the selective gas loss from ice cores after coring (e.g. Ikeda-Fukazawa and others, Reference Ikeda-Fukazawa2005; Oyabu and others, Reference Oyabu, Kawamura, Kitamura, Dallmayr and Kitamura2020). Experimental data on the Ar/N2 ratio may help to extend the existing models of bubble-to-hydrate transformation and of diffusive mass transport of air constituents through the ice matrix. The isotopic measurements would also be available by some microscopic methods in the future.
2. Methods
2.1 NEEM ice core
The Greenland NEEM ice core was extracted at 77.45 °N, 51.06 °W, at an altitude of 2450 m above sea level. The location has an annual mean temperature of −29°C with an annual mean surface mass-balance of 0.22 m in ice equivalent. The NEEM project (2008–2012) drilled to bedrock at a depth of 2537 m, with the resulting extracted ice going back about 130 000 years (NEEM comm. members, 2013).
Until present, no detailed investigation has been conducted on air-hydrate crystals in NEEM ice cores. Considering the bore-hole temperature profile (Sheldon and others, Reference Sheldon, Steffensen, Hansen, Popp and Johnsen2014), the phase equilibrium condition of air-hydrate crystal (Miller, Reference Miller1969), and the air-hydrate distributions analyzed in various deep cores (Uchida and others, Reference Uchida, Yasuda, Oto, Shen and Ohmura2014), the BHTZ should occur from about 850 to 1250 m (rectangular box in Fig. 1). It has been reported that the brittle zone in this core is from 600 to 1250 m, particularly in 750–1100 m (Rasmussen and others, Reference Rasmussen, Abbott, Blunier, Bourne and Brook2013), where the mechanical properties of the core samples are weakened. As the brittle zone and the transition zone are known to be in good agreement (Uchida and others, Reference Uchida1994a), we consider that the prediction of the transition zone in Figure 1 would be valid.
Here we analyze ice-core samples from two depths: 1548 m (last glacial period, about 19.2 ka BP) and 2406 m (last interglacial period, about 125.5 ka BP). These ages of the core samples were derived from Rasmussen and others (Reference Rasmussen, Abbott, Blunier, Bourne and Brook2013). As these depths are well below the transition zone, the air inclusions in these ice cores immediately after retrieval should be only air-hydrate crystals.
The 1548 m core was drilled in 2009, the 2406 m core in 2010. Both were kept at about −20 to −25°C during the drilling operation and transportation. After arriving in Japan, they were stored in a low-temperature room at −50°C at the National Institute of Polar Research (NIPR) for about 8 years.
2.2 SEM sample preparation
We followed essentially the same experimental procedures as Shigeyama and others (Reference Shigeyama, Nagatsuka, Homma, Takata and Goto-Azuma2019), so here we describe them only briefly.
From the ice core stored at −50°C, we cut out a thin-section sample (about 10–20 mm × 10 mm × 1–4 mm) with a band saw in a low-temperature room at −20°C. The ice sample was set to the SEM holder (consisting of a shuttle and an aluminum stub) with a frozen adhesive (Tissue Tek, Sakura Finetek Japan) that includes polyvinyl alcohol and polyethylene glycol (safety data sheet, Tissue Tek). Then, the surface of the ice sample was flattened with a microtome. The air inclusions were observed and check their locations in the sample by an optical microscope (BX 51; Olympus Corporation, Tokyo, Japan) to analyze the same air-hydrate crystal by SEM/EDS. These processes lasted more than 5 h during which the sample was kept at −20°C.
For transferring the sample to the SEM preparation chamber (−190°C), we used liquid N2 to keep the sample cold to avoid further ice relaxation and frost condensation. Then, the sample was installed on the cold stage (−140°C) in the SEM sample chamber (120 Pa of N2 gas atmosphere). To eliminate surface frost, and to smooth the sample surface, the sample was sublimed by increasing the temperature of the cold stage to about −80°C for about 5 min before the observations.
2.3 SEM observations and EDS measurements on air-hydrate crystals
For the SEM observations, we used an environmental SEM (Quanta 450 FEG; Thermo Fisher Scientific) equipped with a cryogenic preparation system (PP3010; Quorum Technologies, Lewes, UK). The EDS measurements used an energy-dispersive X-ray spectrometer (X-Max 50; Oxford Instruments, plc, Abingdon, UK) with an acceleration voltage of 20 kV. To reduce buildup of surface charge, N2 gas was purged and observations were made in low vacuum mode (120 Pa). An EDS measurement of a single spot was integrated until the X-ray count reached 3 × 106 (about 1 min). To ignore the damage of the sample due to the EDS measurement, multiple measurements were carried out on different points for an air-hydrate crystal.
The EDS's energy resolution is about 10 eV. We estimated the spatial resolution of the EDS measurements by comparing measurements across an air-hydrate crystal to the surrounding ice crystal, finding a value of about 15 μm, which is much smaller than the roughly 100 μm diameter size of the air-hydrate crystals.
Thin-section images showing the two air-hydrate crystals (labeled H1 and H2) from the 1548 m depth, and the three air-hydrate crystals (H3, H4, and H5) from the 2406 m depth are shown in Figure 2.
3. Results and discussion
3.1 Optical microscope observations and SEM images of air-hydrate crystals
The optical microscopic observations revealed several types of air inclusions, specifically air-hydrate crystals, air bubbles, and plate-like inclusions (PLI: Fig. 3). Since the observed ice core samples were from depths below BHTZ (Fig. 1), air inclusions other than air-hydrate crystals were formed after the ice core recovery. Thus, we briefly consider how the transport and storage may have affected the hydrate crystal. After recovery, the ice core was kept at about −20 to −30°C for about 1 year at the drilling site to its transportation to Japan, and then kept at −50°C in the storage room for about 8 years until our analysis. At atmospheric pressure and −50°C, almost no air-hydrate crystals dissociate (Uchida and others, Reference Uchida, Hondoh, Mae, Shoji and Azuma1994b), indicating that the bubbles and PLIs observed in the present study likely formed during transport and storage, or during the thin-section sample preparation. However, the microscope images showed that many air-hydrate crystals had not dissociated. We conclude that the storage and handling conditions of the samples used in the present study were sufficient for the purpose of this study.
During the SEM-EDS measurements, cross-sections of the air-hydrate crystals are exposed to the low pressure (120 Pa N2) condition under low temperature (−140°C) in the SEM sample chamber. So, we briefly consider their stability on the SEM's stage. Air-hydrates are thermodynamically unstable under the condition of −140°C and 120 Pa N2 atmosphere, yet the dissociation rate at sub-zero temperatures is suppressed by the self-preservation effect (Uchida and others, Reference Uchida, Sakurai and Hondoh2011). Moreover, the dissociation rate of gas hydrates can be reduced by keeping the SEM's stage temperature low, a method that has enabled SEM observations of CH4 hydrates (Stern and others, Reference Stern, Kirby, Circone and Durham2004), CO2 hydrates (Kuhs and others, Reference Kuhs, Genov, Staykova and Hansen2004), and air hydrates (Barnes and others, Reference Barnes, Mulvaney, Robinson and Wolff2002). From these considerations, the SEM observations here should accurately show the hydrate crystals as they were in the deep ice.
The SEM images in Figure 4 show fine structures inside the air-hydrate crystals. The source of this structure is unclear, but is similar to the structure seen in the ‘globular-type air-hydrate’ from the GRIP ice core (Barnes and others, Reference Barnes, Mulvaney, Robinson and Wolff2002). To confirm that the observation targets were air-hydrate, we observed the crystals during multi-step sublimation. Figure 5 shows the changes in observation target H5 at each step. Figure 5 (i), shows the upper-half cross-section of H5. After three sublimation steps, the size and shape of the newly exposed cross-section change as shown in Figure 5 (ii). The internal pattern has also changed, with the fine structure in Figure 5 (i) becoming coarser in Figure 5 (ii). With further sublimation steps, the outer shape and internal pattern change further (Fig. 5 (iii)−(iv)). These observations show H5 to be clearly different from the surrounding ice, with changes occurring during sublimation. For an object of this size to exist in the ice core, it would have to be an air-hydrate crystal. Therefore, we conclude that H5, as well as the similar cases H1–H4, are air-hydrate crystals.
NEEM ice-core samples are known to have particles of salt and other compounds (e.g. Oyabu, Reference Oyabu2015; Oyabu and others, Reference Oyabu, Iizuka, Fischer, Schüpbach and Gfeller2015; Eichler and others, Reference Eichler, Kleitz, Bayer-Giraldi, Jansen and Kipfstuhl2017; Schüpbach and others, Reference Schüpbach, Fischer, Bigler, Erhardt and Gfeller2018). These particles contain Si, Fe, Na, Mg, Al, S, K, and Ca, with some particles attached to bubbles (Shigeyama and others, Reference Shigeyama, Nakazawa, Goto-Azuma, Homma and Nagatsuka2021). Using the following line of reasoning, we selected air-hydrate crystals that clearly contained fine particles on its surface or inside. First, the particle can act as a nucleus for promoting the phase change from bubble to air-hydrate crystal (Ohno and others, Reference Ohno, Lipenkov and Hondoh2010). Therefore, the air-hydrate crystal with a particle would likely have formed relatively early (i.e. at a shallower depth) in the transition zone. Then, considering the fractionation effect, we expect that such an air-hydrate crystal would enclathrate more Ar in the crystal. Although the air components would be changed to the original one below BHTZ (Oyabu and others, Reference Oyabu, Kawamura, Uchida, Fujita and Kitamurain review, 2021), we chose higher possibility conditions that were likely to find Ar in the air-hydrate crystals.
3.2 EDS measurements of air-hydrate crystals
In examining the EDS results, we start by focusing on hydrate H3 (Fig. 4). Figure 6a shows the position of the air-hydrate crystal with an optical microscope. The part of the crystal viewed with a SEM secondary electron image is in Figure 6b. The higher magnification image in Figure 6c shows the positions of the EDS measurements on ice outside the air-hydrate (white ‘ + ’) and on the inside of the air-hydrate crystal (yellow ‘*’).
The EDS spectrum of ice in Figure 7a shows a large O peak at 0.53 keV, derived from H2O, plus smaller peaks for C at 0.28 keV, from the background (likely from the freeze adhesive), and N at 0.39 keV, derived from the chamber gas. There is also a weak, broad background peak at 1–8 keV. In contrast, the spectrum from the inside of the air-hydrate crystal (Fig. 7b) shows a much stronger N peak intensity and a weak, yet distinct, Ar peak at about 2.95 keV.
For the ice case, we attribute the N peak to the chamber gas because we observed a similar N peak in the spectrum of pure ice in a comparative measurement (Fig. S1). We also found that signals from various substances used in the sample holder and SEM chamber (Fig. S2) do not appear in Figure 7. These tests help confirm that the EDS spectra in Figure 7 come from ice, air-hydrate, and chamber gas, not the sample holder.
To remove the signal that is not from the sample and to extract the characteristic signals of the air-hydrate crystal, we subtracted an average ice spectrum from the spectrum from an air-hydrate crystal. This average ice spectrum comes from averaging the EDS spectra from several points surrounding the air-hydrate crystal (e.g. the white ‘ + ’ in Fig. 6c). The resulting difference spectrum for H3 is shown in Figure 8. The difference spectrum of H3 shows both N and Ar peaks as positive values, whereas the O peak is negative. As both spectra are from nearby positions, they should both have the same contribution of N from the atmosphere of the SEM chamber. Thus, the N signal in the difference should largely be from the air-hydrate crystal. By this argument, the three peaks in Figure 8 are considered to be from elements in the air-hydrate crystal: N2, O2, and Ar. This appears to be the first time that experiment has shown an air-hydrate crystal in an ice core to contain Ar.
If the air-hydrate crystal contains Ar at the current atmosphere proportion (0.93%), the intensity of Ar signal would be near the noise level of this sample or close to the sensitivity limit in the EDS measurement. We had chosen only air-hydrate crystals with particles to possibly increase the Ar signal, but it is difficult to estimate the intensity quantitatively. Thus, the difference-spectrum analysis method should be useful for Ar observation in the air-hydrate crystal. Concerning the composition ratio, we did not calculate this ratio from the peak intensity because we did not run an EDS measurement on a standard sample. So, the concentration of each component in the air-hydrate crystal cannot be discussed here.
Concerning the reason for a negative O peak, we argue as follows. The O elements producing the peak are H2O molecules in both the ice and air-hydrate crystals, plus the enclathrated guest molecule O2 in the air-hydrate. (Although we don't know the accurate value of O2 dissolved in the ice matrix, we consider it to be negligible small comparing to the sensitivity limit in the EDS measurement.) Assuming that ice is a pure ice single crystal (0.917 g cm−3), the number concentration of O surrounding the air-hydrate crystal is the concentration of H2O molecules in ice:
In the air-hydrate crystal, the number concentration of O equals the concentration of host H2O molecules constructing the single crystal of structure-II hydrate plus twice that of the guest O2 molecules. We estimate the total number in a unit cell by assuming the occupancy ratio of a guest molecule to be 0.9 (Hondoh and others, Reference Hondoh1990) and the fraction of O2 in guest molecules to be that in the normal atmosphere. Specifically, for the latter fraction, we use 0.2 because the ice-core samples are from depths below the transition zone (e.g. Ikeda-Fukazawa and others, Reference Ikeda-Fukazawa, Hondoh, Fukumura, Fukazawa and Mae2001). Finally, we divide by the unit-cell volume to get
where the denominator on the left side is the unit-cell volume. As this concentration is less than that of the pure ice, the intensity of O in the air-hydrate crystal should be less than that of pure ice making the peak intensity of O negative in the difference spectrum.
The EDS spectra at multiple points in all five air-hydrate crystals (two from 1548 m and three from 2406 m) indicated the existence of N, O, and Ar elements. Given the small signal-to-noise ratio (S/N) of the Ar peak from each spectrum, we added all Ar signals from both air-hydrate crystals H1 and H2 in the 1548 m sample to make one spectrum. The same was done for air-hydrate crystals H3 and H4 in the 2406 m sample and shown in Figure 9. The Gaussian fit (Origin 2021, Lightstone) gives a weak yet distinct signal-to-noise ratio of about 3 and peak energy of 2.964(3) keV (the error being the fit's standard deviation.). This peak energy coincides well with the characteristic X-ray line of Ar, Kα at 2.958 keV (Goldstein and others, Reference Goldstein, Newbury, Echlin, Joy and Lyman2003) within the energy resolution of the EDS measurement (approximately 10 eV). Another element that has a characteristic X-ray line in this energy region is silver (Ag: Lα = 2.984 keV (Goldstein, and others, Reference Goldstein, Newbury, Echlin, Joy and Lyman2003)), but an Ag signal was not observed in the EDS measurement of the SEM holder (see Fig. S2) nor in the fine particles. The analysis thus confirms that this peak is Ar in the air-hydrate crystal.
We ran the same analysis on both the N and O spectra, with the results of the gaussian fitting summarized in Table 1. The analyses indicate that all peaks could be identified with the literature values, and that the difference between the ice-core samples taken from different depths was within the error range.
(Reference values in parentheses are the characteristic X-ray lines from Goldstein and others, Reference Goldstein, Newbury, Echlin, Joy and Lyman2003).
As another test of the source of the N signal in the air-hydrate spectra, we ran the EDS measurements at several steps during the sublimation of hydrate H5. The peak for N in Figure 10 continuously decays after each sublimation step. For example, several curves included in the group of (i) in Figure 10 were obtained between when SEM images (i) and (ii) were obtained, in which three sublimation steps were operated (Fig. 5). Note that the spectra obtained between sublimation processes were reproducible (for example, spectra with the highest peak). Therefore, an air-hydrate crystal was dissociated not by an EDS measurement, but by the sublimation process in our experimental conditions. By the sublimation step imaged as (iii), the N peak has vanished. Thus, as the N peak vanished with the inner fine structure, the EDS measurements suggest that the measured N (as well as the Ar) signals came from the guest molecules in the air-hydrate crystal.
We also ran SEM-EDS measurements on the fine particles associated with these five air-hydrate crystals. In the resulting EDS spectra, we frequently observed that the signals from the particle overlapped those from the neighboring air-hydrate crystal (for detailed data, see Shigeyama and others, Reference Shigeyama, Nakazawa, Goto-Azuma, Homma and Nagatsuka2021). Therefore, it is difficult to confirm whether the constituent elements of the fine particles contain those with a peak near 3 keV. However, when the hydrate H5 sample was sublimated until the N peak vanished, the EDS measurement of the fine particles attached to the hydrate showed no peaks near 3 keV. Consistent with this finding, previous SEM-EDS analyses of 838 particles from 1550.7 and 2401.6 m depths in the NEEM ice core showed almost no particles with a peak near 3 keV, which were analyzed by a similar SEM (JSM-6360LV, JEOL)-EDS (JED2201, JEOL) system (Oyabu, Reference Oyabu2015; Oyabu and others, Reference Oyabu, Iizuka, Fischer, Schüpbach and Gfeller2015). Because their method excluded the signals from the surrounding ice and air-hydrate crystals, and their findings being consistent with ours, we argue that the fine particles associated with the air-hydrate crystals analyzed in this study contain almost no elements showing Ar peaks. The Ar is thus most likely from the air-hydrate crystal.
4. Conclusions
In this study, we ran SEM-EDS measurements on air-hydrate crystals from sections at 1548 m and 2406 m of the NEEM ice core, Greenland. The measurements gave direct experimental evidence of enclathrated Ar in five air-hydrate crystals below the bubble-air-hydrate crystal transition zone. The difference EDS spectrum between air-hydrate crystal and surrounding ice had an N peak, thus indicating the existence of N2 in the air-hydrate crystals. Although N2 in the air-hydrate crystal had been detected before by Raman spectroscopy, it had not been detected with EDS. These results showed that the SEM-EDS measurement is a promising method for observing the presence of Raman-inactive inert gases in air-hydrate crystals. Future studies with this method will examine the composition ratios of the components in the air-hydrate crystals.
Supplementary material
The supplementary material for this article can be found at https://doi.org/10.1017/jog.2021.115.
Acknowledgements
We thank all the NEEM project members involved in logistics, drilling, and ice core processing. NEEM is directed and organized by the Centre of Ice and Climate at the Niels Bohr Institute and the United States National Science Foundation, Office of Polar Programs. NEEM is supported by funding agencies and institutions in Belgium (FNRS-CFB and FWO), Canada (NRCan/GSC), China (CAS), Denmark (FIST), France (IPEV, CNRS/ INSU, CEA, and ANR), Germany (AWI), Iceland (RannIs), Japan (NIPR), Korea (KOPRI), The Netherlands (NWO/ALW), Sweden (VR), Switzerland (SNF), the United Kingdom (NERC), and the USA (US NSF, Office of Polar Programs).
This study was supported by the Environment Research and Technology Development Fund (JPMEERF20202003) of the Environmental Restoration and Conservation Agency of Japan, the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science KAKENHI (Grants JP22221002, JP18H04140, JP20H04327 and JP20H04980), the Arctic Challenge for Sustainability (ArCS) project (JPMXD1300000000), the Arctic Challenge for Sustainability II (ArCS II) project (JPMXD1420318865), a grant for the National Institute of Polar Research, Japan (Project Research KP305 and General Collaboration Project no. 3-6), and the Graduate University for Advanced Studies, SOKENDAI.
We acknowledge Professor Nobuhiko Azuma and Dr Morimasa Takata (Nagaoka University of Technology) for their technical supports and fruitful discussion. We would also like to thank Dr Jon Nelson (Redmond Phys. Sci.) for English language editing, anonymous reviewers and the scientific editor for their reviewing and editorial comments.