Journal Article

On the use of high-density polyethylene bottles for long-term storage of total alkalinity samples

Woosley, R.J., D. Neithardt, J.A. Bruno and L. Lahn (2025)
Limnology and Oceanography Methods, (doi: 10.1002/lom3.10703)

Abstract / Summary:

Abstract: Total alkalinity (TA) plays an important role in buffering seawater and determining how much anthropogenic carbon dioxide the oceans can absorb and mitigate the rise in atmospheric concentrations. Total alkalinity varies with location, depth, and time making it an important variable needed to quantify and monitor ocean acidification, and potentially for ocean alkalinity enhancement interventions. Currently, best practices are to use expensive high-quality borosilicate glass bottles for collecting and storing these samples. However, unlike other carbon system variables, TA is not affected by gas exchange meaning plastic bottles may be suitable for TA sample storage. Plastic bottles are lighter, cheaper, and less prone to breakage making them easier to handle and ship. 

Here, we test the suitability of high-density polyethylene (HDPE) for collection and long-term storage of TA samples. In two sets of experiments, it was determined that HDPE is not suitable for long-term storage of TA samples as there were large changes in TA over time and precision of duplicate samples was very poor. 

We hypothesize that HDPE plastic is slightly porous leading to leaching of alkalinity either into or out of the bottle over time impacting the value of the sample. Use of HDPE bottles for TA samples is not recommended for long term sample storage.

Citation:

Woosley, R.J., D. Neithardt, J.A. Bruno and L. Lahn (2025): On the use of high-density polyethylene bottles for long-term storage of total alkalinity samples. Limnology and Oceanography Methods, (doi: 10.1002/lom3.10703) (https://aslopubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/lom3.10703#:~:text=Here%2C%20we%20test%20the%20suitability,duplicate%20samples%20was%20very%20poor.)