Chemosphere | 2021

Are chlorine isotopologues of polychlorinated organic pollutants binomially distributed? Theoretical evaluation, numerical simulation, experimental evidences and implications for chlorine isotope analysis and source identification.

 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Relative abundances of chlorine isotopologues of polychlorinated organic compounds (POCs) are commonly recognized to comply with binomial distribution. This study investigated whether chlorine isotopologue distributions of polychlorinated organic pollutants are binomial and evaluated implications of the distributions to relevant analytical and environmental research by theoretical derivation, numerical simulation and experiment. Chlorine kinetic isotope effects and equilibrium isotope effects vary in stepwise chlorination reactions, leading to inconsistent chlorine isotope ratios on different reaction positions of products, which results in non-binomial chlorine isotopologue distributions of the products. After physical changes and dechlorination, chlorine isotopologues of POCs are unlikely binomially distributed. The experimental results demonstrated that the chlorine isotopologue distributions of perchloroethylene, trichloroethylene, methyl-triclosan, and 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzofuran in standards and four polychlorinated biphenyls in both standard solutions and sediments were non-binomial. The patterns of chlorine isotope ratios derived from pairs of neighboring chlorine isotopologues of POCs from different sources were different, implying different isotopologue distributions, which might cause biases in compound-specific isotope analysis of chlorine (CSIA-Cl) and source identification. A complete-isotopologue scheme for isotope ratio calculation is recommended to CSIA-Cl for obtaining accurate data. Gas chromatography-double focusing magnetic-sector high resolution mass spectrometry is a promising instrument for CSIA-Cl that uses the complete-isotopologue scheme due to its excellent sensitivity, selectivity and ruggedness. This study yields new insights into chlorine isotopologue distributions of polychlorinated organic pollutants and proposes practicable solutions to improve CSIA-Cl that uses gas chromatography-mass spectrometry and facilitate source identification of polychlorinated organic pollutants.

Volume 282
Pages \n 131099\n
DOI 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2021.131099
Language English
Journal Chemosphere

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