3D-CSIA

Carbon, Chlorine, and Hydrogen Isotope Fractionation in Transformation of ICE to Ethene by a Dehalococcoides Culture

Journal Article (2013)
Author(s)

Tomasz Kuder (University of Oklahoma)

B. van Breukelen (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam)

Mindy Vanderford (GSI Environmental Inc.)

Paul Philp (University of Oklahoma)

Affiliation
External organisation
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1021/es400463p
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Publication Year
2013
Language
English
Affiliation
External organisation
Issue number
17
Volume number
47
Pages (from-to)
9668-9677

Abstract

Carbon (C), chlorine (Cl), and hydrogen (H) isotope effects were determined during dechlorination of TCE to ethene by a mixed Dehalococcoides (Dhc) culture. The C isotope effects for the dechlorination steps were consistent with data published in the past for reductive dechlorination (RD) by Dhc. The Cl effects (combined with an inverse H effect in TCE) suggested that dechlorination proceeded through nucleophilic reactions with cobalamin rather than by an electron transfer mechanism. Depletions of 37Cl in daughter compounds, resulting from fractionation at positions away from the dechlorination center (secondary isotope effects), further support the nucleophilic dechlorination mechanism. Determination of C and Cl isotope ratios of the reactants and products in the reductive dechlorination chain offers a potential tool for differentiation of Dhc activity from alternative transformation mechanisms (e.g., aerobic degradation and reductive dechlorination proceeding via outer sphere mechanisms), in studies of in situ attenuation of chlorinated ethenes. Hydrogenation of the reaction products (DCE, VC, and ethene) showed a major preference for the 1H isotope. Detection of depleted dechlorination products could provide a line of evidence in discrimination between alternative sources of TCE (e.g., evolution from DNAPL sources or from conversion of PCE).

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