Friday, 24 April, 2026
Chlorinated Solvents
The Chlorinated Solvents family includes sixteen molecules in the IsoFind catalog, divided into five subfamilies that reflect their base structure: chlorinated ethylenes (PCE, TCE, DCE, VC), chlorinated methanes (chloroform, DCM, CCl₄), chlorinated ethanes, chloroethanes, and chlorobenzenes. This is the best-documented family in the catalog: eighteen tabulated degradation pathways, twenty-one isotopic fractionations covering carbon and chlorine, and eighteen parent-metabolite relationships forming complete cascades. Historically, CSIA was developed primarily on chlorinated solvents, and IsoFind reflects this scientific maturity.
Five Subfamilies
The classification by subfamily follows classical chemical nomenclature: ethylenes for molecules with a C=C double bond, ethanes for saturated two-carbon chains, methanes for C₁ compounds, and chlorobenzenes for aromatics. This granularity is necessary because environmental behaviors differ significantly between these classes.
| Subfamily | Count | Molecules |
|---|---|---|
| Chlorinated Ethylenes | 6 | PCE, TCE, cDCE, tDCE, 1,1-DCE, VC |
| Chlorobenzenes | 4 | Chlorobenzene, 1,2-DCB, 1,4-DCB, HCB |
| Chlorinated Methanes | 3 | Chloroform, DCM, CCl₄ |
| Chlorinated Ethanes | 2 | TCA (1,1,1-trichloroethane), 1,2-DCA |
| Chloroethanes | 1 | 1,1,2-TCA |
Four molecules remain under free access (simple chlorobenzenes and HCB, plus 1,1,2-TCA as a TCE precursor). The other twelve, including all chlorinated ethylenes and chlorinated methanes, are part of the Pro access.
Regulatory Thresholds
Regulatory thresholds cover a wide range depending on the molecule and its toxicity. Vinyl chloride carries the strictest threshold (0.5 µg/L Dir. 98/83/EC, 2 µg/L EPA MCL) due to its IARC Group 1 status (liver angiosarcoma). TCA, once a massive industrial solvent, has a high threshold (200 µg/L EPA) reflecting its relatively low toxicity, despite its ban for ozone depletion reasons.
| Molecule | Water Threshold | Main Framework | IARC Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| HCB (hexachlorobenzene) | 0.010 µg/L | WFD 2013/39/EU Priority Hazardous; Stockholm Convention | Group 2A |
| Vinyl Chloride (VC) | 0.5 µg/L | Dir. 98/83/EC; EPA MCL 2 µg/L | Group 1 |
| Chloroform | 0.1 µg/L | Dir. 98/83/EC sum of THMs; WHO 2022 0.30 µg/L | Group 2A |
| CCl₄ (carbon tetrachloride) | 2 µg/L | Dir. 98/83/EC; Montreal Protocol (Banned ODS) | Group 2B |
| 1,2-DCA | 3 µg/L | Dir. 98/83/EC; EPA MCL 5 µg/L | Group 2B |
| TCE | 10 µg/L | Dir. 98/83/EC sum of TCE+PCE; EPA MCL 5 µg/L | Group 1 |
| PCE (tetrachloroethylene) | 10 µg/L | Dir. 98/83/EC sum of TCE+PCE; EPA MCL 5 µg/L | Group 2A |
| DCM | 20 µg/L | WHO 2022; Banned for EU general public since 2010 | Group 2A |
| 1,1-DCE | 30 µg/L | EPA MCL 7 µg/L; WHO 2022 30 µg/L | - |
| cDCE / tDCE | 50 µg/L | EPA MCL 70 and 100 µg/L; WHO 2022 50 µg/L | - |
| TCA (1,1,1-trichloroethane) | 200 µg/L | EPA MCL; Montreal Protocol (Banned ODS) | Group 3 |
Directive 98/83/EC groups TCE and PCE under a single combined threshold of 10 µg/L. On a site contaminated by sequential dechlorination (PCE → TCE), this sum remains conserved until the cascade proceeds to cDCE. Compliance with this common threshold therefore provides no information on the degradation state, only on the total load of the first two terms.
The Anaerobic Dechlorination Cascade
The flagship case study for chlorinated solvents is the anaerobic reductive dechlorination cascade by Dehalococcoides and Dehalobacter. It transforms PCE into TCE, then cDCE, VC, and finally ethene, removing one chlorine at each step. All four steps are tabulated in the database with their maximum molar yields.
| Step | Target Molecule | Typical t½ (d) | Dominant Metabolite | Max Yield |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | PCE | 500 | TCE | 0.90 |
| 2 | TCE | 300 | cDCE | 0.85 |
| 3 | cDCE | 600 | VC | 0.90 |
| 4 | VC | 900 | Ethene (non-toxic) | 0.85 |
The cascade slows down as it progresses: PCE dechlorination is relatively fast with active strains, but VC dechlorination to ethene becomes the rate-limiting step on most sites. The accumulation of cDCE and VC intermediates is a typical signature of mature plumes, where all four compounds appear simultaneously with ratios that inform on the progress of the reaction.
The cascade produces a toxicological paradox: VC, a degradation intermediate, is classified as IARC Group 1, whereas the parent PCE is only Group 2A. Partial degradation stalled before ethene can therefore increase the overall health risk. This property makes isotopic monitoring essential to confirm the actual progress of the cascade through to the non-toxic terminal product.
Tabulated Degradation Pathways
Eighteen degradation pathways are tabulated for this family, the highest count in the catalog. They cover anaerobic biological pathways (dominant reductive dechlorination), aerobic biological pathways (oxidation by mono- and dioxygenases), abiotic hydrolysis pathways, and remediation pathways via Fe-ZVI reactive barriers.
Anaerobic Biological Pathways
| Molecule | Eh (mV) | Typ t½ (d) | Metabolite | Strain |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PCE | −250 to +50 | 500 | TCE | Dehalococcoides / Dehalobacter |
| TCE | −250 to +50 | 300 | cDCE | Dehalococcoides mccartyi |
| cDCE | −250 to 0 | 600 | VC | Dehalococcoides |
| VC | −300 to −50 | 900 | Ethene | Dehalococcoides (limiting step) |
| 1,2-DCA | −250 to 0 | 300 | Ethene | Dehalorespiration |
| TCA | −250 to 0 | 120 | 1,1-DCA | Dehalobacter sp. |
| Chloroform | −250 to 0 | 150 | DCM | Dehalobacter sp. CF (e⁻ acceptor) |
Aerobic Biological Pathways
| Molecule | Eh (mV) | Typ. t½ (d) | Metabolite | Mechanism |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| DCM | +100 to +400 | 20 | Formaldehyde → CO₂ | Dichloromethane dehalogenase |
| VC | +100 to +400 | 30 | CO₂ | Alkene monooxygenase (Mycobacterium) |
| Chlorobenzene | +100 to +400 | 45 | Catechol | Chlorobenzene dioxygenase (Pseudomonas) |
| cDCE | +100 to +400 | 60 | CO₂ | Polaromonas (carbon source) |
| 1,2-DCA | +100 to +400 | 100 | 2-chloroethanol → glycolaldehyde | Xanthobacter autotrophicus GJ10 |
| TCE | +100 to +400 | 700 | TCE-epoxide → glyoxylate | Co-metabolism, requires co-substrate |
| Chloroform | +100 to +400 | 700 | CO₂ | Aerobic co-metabolism |
Abiotic Pathways and Remediation
| Molecule | Pathway | Environment | Typ. t½ (d) | Metabolite |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1,2-DCA | Chemical Hydrolysis | Water, pH 5-9 | 23,000 | 2-chloroethanol |
| TCA | Chemical Hydrolysis (elimination) | Water, pH 5-9 | 400 | 1,1-DCE (more toxic!) |
| TCE | Fe-ZVI (reactive barrier) | PRB, Eh −400 to −100 mV | 15 | Ethene / Ethane |
| PCE | Fe-ZVI (reactive barrier) | PRB, Eh −400 to −100 mV | 30 | Ethene / Ethane via radicals |
The chemical hydrolysis pathway of TCA deserves particular attention: it produces 1,1-DCE, which is more toxic than the parent compound and relatively persistent. While this pathway is slow on a human timescale (t½ ≈ 400 days), it is inevitable at TCA-contaminated sites. The accumulation of 1,1-DCE upstream of a biotic degradation signature is a recognizable abiotic fingerprint.
Abundant CSIA Data
Twenty-one isotopic fractionations are tabulated for this family, representing more than one-third of the entire catalog. They systematically cover carbon (¹³C/¹²C), and for several molecules also chlorine (³⁷Cl/³⁵Cl), enabling a particularly powerful dual-isotope diagnosis for organochlorines.
Carbon Fractionation
| Molecule | Context | ε ¹³C (‰) | Range | AKIE |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chlorobenzene | Laboratory Pseudomonas | -0.4 | [-0.8 ; -0.2] | - |
| TCA | Laboratory | -4.9 | [-6.0 ; -3.5] | 1.005 |
| PCE | Biotic culture laboratory | -5.5 | [-7.1 ; -3.5] | 1.006 |
| PCE | Abiotic Fe-ZVI | -7.8 | [-13.2 ; -5.7] | 1.009 |
| 1,2-DCA | Xanthobacter degradation | -3.5 | [-4.3 ; -2.5] | 1.007 |
| 1,2-DCA | Laboratory (dechlorination) | -33.0 | [-41.6 ; -27.5] | 1.034 |
| VC | Dechlorination culture laboratory | -22.4 | [-31.1 ; -14.8] | 1.024 |
| VC | Laboratory Mycobacterium (aerobic) | -8.2 | [-12.5 ; -5.6] | 1.008 |
| TCE | Consensus on 20 studies (biotic) | -8.8 | [-14.0 ; -6.7] | 1.0095 |
| TCE | Pure culture laboratory | -18.2 | [-22.5 ; -13.0] | 1.020 |
| TCE | Abiotic Fe-ZVI | -15.0 | [-25.6 ; -8.6] | 1.016 |
| cDCE | Culture laboratory | -14.1 | [-21.1 ; -9.0] | 1.015 |
| cDCE | Polaromonas (aerobic) | -6.5 | [-9.0 ; -4.2] | - |
| Chloroform | Dehalobacter | -27.5 | [-33.0 ; -22.0] | 1.028 |
| DCM | Methylobacterium extorquens | -42.0 | [-66.0 ; -22.0] | 1.045 |
DCM carries the highest fractionation in the database (ε = −42 ‰, AKIE = 1.045): this is the largest ¹³C fractionation reported for biodegradation in literature. Variability is significant depending on the strain (ranging from −66 to −22 ‰), which serves as a reminder that a single value is not suitable for site interpretation: the range encompasses the actual mechanistic uncertainty.
Chlorine and Dual Isotope Fractionation
| Molecule | ε ³⁷Cl (‰) | Λ C/Cl | Diagnosis |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1,2-DCA | -1.0 | 0.28 | Dechlorination |
| Chloroform | -4.3 | 0.16 | Reductive dechlorination |
| DCM | -5.0 | 0.12 | Biotic dechlorination |
| cDCE | -3.0 | 0.21 | Reductive dechlorination |
| TCE | -3.9 | 0.44 | Λ ≈ 0.4 biotic vs ≈ 0.7 chemical |
| PCE | -2.7 | 0.49 | Dual CSIA distinguishes oxidative vs reductive |
The Λ parameter (the slope in a dual isotope plot of Δδ³⁷Cl against Δδ¹³C) is the key mechanistic discriminant for chlorinated solvents. Two pathways can produce the same apparent ¹³C enrichment but diverge in the dual plot. The most important bibliographic note in the database for this family concerns TCE: "Λ ≈ 0.4 biotic signature vs ≈ 0.7 chemical." This distinction is why double-element CSIA remains the standard diagnostic tool for PCE/TCE plumes.
Metabolites and Full Cascades
Eighteen parent-metabolite relationships are tabulated, allowing the propagation of full cascades within the IsoFind simulation engine. Below is the consolidated table for the three primary cascades.
| Parent | Metabolite | Max Yield | Stability | Toxic |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PCE | TCE | 0.90 | intermediate | yes |
| cDCE | 0.70 | intermediate | yes | |
| VC (IARC Class 1 carcinogen) | 0.50 | intermediate | yes | |
| Ethene (mineralization) | 0.40 | stable | no | |
| TCE | cDCE | 0.85 | intermediate | yes |
| tDCE (minor pathway) | 0.05 | intermediate | yes | |
| VC | 0.60 | intermediate | yes | |
| Ethene | 0.50 | stable | no | |
| cDCE | VC | 0.90 | intermediate | yes |
| VC | Ethene | 0.85 | stable | no |
| Chloroform | DCM | 0.80 | intermediate | yes |
| DCM | Formaldehyde (to CO₂) | 0.30 | intermediate | no |
| TCA | 1,1-DCE (more toxic!) | 0.80 | intermediate | yes |
| TCA | 1,1-DCA | 0.70 | intermediate | yes |
| Chlorobenzene | Catechol | 0.70 | intermediate | no |
Standard Case Study: A Legacy PCE Plume
Former dry cleaning or industrial degreasing activities have generated a PCE plume that has partially degraded over decades. The instantaneous state of the plume integrates all steps of the cascade.
| Observation | IsoFind Interpretation |
|---|---|
| Residual PCE + significant TCE + dominant cDCE | Active mature cascade, degradation in progress |
| High cDCE/TCE ratio | Advanced progress on Step 2 |
| Significant presence of VC | Step 3 partially reached, local health risk |
| Ethene detected | Functional complete cascade |
| δ¹³C enrichment of residual parent | Confirms degradation (not just dilution) |
| Λ TCE/Cl ≈ 0.4 | Biotic signature (Active Dehalococcoides) |
| Λ TCE/Cl ≈ 0.7 | Abiotic Fe-ZVI signature (if barrier installed) |
API Access
| Endpoint | Usage |
|---|---|
| GET /api/molecules/reference/catalogue?famille=Chlorinated solvents | List of the 16 reference chlorinated solvents |
| POST /api/molecules/catalogue/seed/Chlorinated solvents | Pre-fills the project with this family |
| GET /api/molecules/csia/PCE/pathways | Tabulated degradation pathways for PCE |
| POST /api/molecules/csia/resolve | CSIA resolution with local geochemical conditions |
| POST /api/molecules/csia/dual | C/Cl dual isotope with Λ calculation, mechanistic discriminant |
Further Reading
- CSIA Isotopy: Principles of compound-specific fractionation, the key to reading this family.
- Degradation Pathways: All 50 pathways tabulated in the catalog.
- Case Study: Cr(VI) Plume: Example of a reductive plume in a similar context.
- Reference Database: Detailed structure of the molecular catalog.