2004
DOI: 10.1080/01490450490275767
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Effect of Molybdate and Cell Growth on S-Isotope Fractionation During Bacterial Sulfate Reduction

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Cited by 3 publications
(32 citation statements)
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“…The stepwise 34 ε reflects the average mass dependent isotopic discrimination over a short interval (between t x and t x−1 ), that we can relate to the true isotope phenotype of the cells. When calculated in this way and compared with the net 34 ε (Figure 3), our method of estimating the isotope phenotype reveals large 34 ε variations over the batch cycle of 30 h. In the early f values (f > 0.7), fractionation appeared largely constant at roughly −7.5‰ (Figure 3). It is later in the batch cycle that the changing 34 ε becomes important.…”
Section: ■ Results and Discussionmentioning
confidence: 94%
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“…The stepwise 34 ε reflects the average mass dependent isotopic discrimination over a short interval (between t x and t x−1 ), that we can relate to the true isotope phenotype of the cells. When calculated in this way and compared with the net 34 ε (Figure 3), our method of estimating the isotope phenotype reveals large 34 ε variations over the batch cycle of 30 h. In the early f values (f > 0.7), fractionation appeared largely constant at roughly −7.5‰ (Figure 3). It is later in the batch cycle that the changing 34 ε becomes important.…”
Section: ■ Results and Discussionmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…A single fractionation factor, which appears to describe the overall trajectory of the results when f > 0.5 ( 34 ε = −7.5 ‰ ± 0.9 ‰), provides an increasingly poor fit when f < 0.5 (Figure 3). The mean 34 ε over increasingly longer growth intervals has a calculated minimum of −6.8‰ and maximum of −9.9‰. The minimum fractionation is associated with f values closest to 1, and the maximum fractionation is associated with the smallest f values.…”
Section: ■ Results and Discussionmentioning
confidence: 95%
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