Back to Search Start Over

Chlorine-36 as a Tracer of Perchlorate Origin

Authors :
W. Andrew Jackson
Marc Caffee
A. D. Beloso
Paul B. Hatzinger
Neil C. Sturchio
Jeffrey M. Heikoop
John Karl Böhlke
Linnea J. Heraty
Baohua Gu
Michael Dale
Source :
Environmental Science & Technology. 43:6934-6938
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
American Chemical Society (ACS), 2009.

Abstract

Perchlorate (ClO4(-)) is ubiquitous in the environment. It is produced naturally by atmospheric photochemical reactions, and also is synthesized in large quantities for military, aerospace, and industrial applications. Nitrate-enriched salt deposits of the Atacama Desert (Chile) contain high concentrations of natural ClO4(-), and have been exported worldwide since the mid-1800s for use in agriculture. The widespread introduction of synthetic and agricultural ClO4(-) into the environment has contaminated numerous municipal water supplies. Stable isotope ratio measurements of Cl and O have been applied for discrimination of different ClO4(-) sources in the environment. This study explores the potential of 36Cl measurements for further improving the discrimination of ClO4(-) sources. Groundwater and desert soil samples from the southwestern United States (U.S.) contain ClO4(-) having high 36Cl abundances (36Cl/Cl = 3100 x 10(-15) to 28,800 x 10(-15)), compared with those from the Atacama Desert (36Cl/Cl = 0.9 x 10(-15) to 590 x 10(-15)) and synthetic ClO4(-) reagents and products (36Cl/Cl = 0.0 x 10(-15) to 40 x 10(-15)). In conjunction with stable Cl and O isotope ratios, 36Cl data provide a clear distinction among three principal ClO4(-) source types in the environment of the southwestern U.S.

Details

ISSN :
15205851 and 0013936X
Volume :
43
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Environmental Science & Technology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6971d8730ef3d7b36806e33af6d0b006