Section 01
CHLORINE FUNDAMENTALS
Chlorine (Cl₂) is a yellow-green, toxic gas with a sharp, bleach-like odor detectable at 0.5 ppm. It is heavier than air (MW 71 g/mol) and will accumulate in low-lying areas, drains, and below-grade spaces. Chlorine was the first chemical weapon used in large-scale warfare (Ypres, 1915) and remains one of the most commonly released toxic industrial chemicals (TICs) at hazmat incidents, primarily from water treatment and chemical manufacturing operations.
Water Treatment Facilities
Chlorine gas (1-ton cylinders) and sodium hypochlorite are primary disinfectants at water treatment plants and wastewater facilities. Cl₂ cylinder leaks and hypochlorite/acid mixing are the most common sources of emergency releases.
Swimming Pool Incidents
Accidental mixing of pool chlorinating chemicals (calcium hypochlorite) with acids (pH decreasers) generates Cl₂ gas in occupied spaces. A significant cause of mass casualty events at recreation facilities.
Rail and Highway Transport
Chlorine is transported in large pressurized tank cars. Rail incidents involving Cl₂ are high-priority hazmat events with large protective action distances — up to 11 km downwind for large night releases per ERG 2024.
Bleach + Acid Reactions
Household bleach (NaOCl) reacts with any acid (vinegar, toilet bowl cleaner, HCl) to generate Cl₂: NaOCl + 2HCl → NaCl + H₂O + Cl₂. This common accidental mixture is a frequent residential and occupational exposure source.
Chlorine is reduced at the same gold/platinum cathode as oxygen in the galvanic O₂ cell. The instrument cannot distinguish Cl₂ reduction from O₂ reduction, reporting a falsely elevated O₂ reading. In a chlorine release environment, the O₂ channel may read 22–25% while the actual O₂ is significantly lower. Never trust the O₂ channel when Cl₂ is present without independent verification.
Section 02
HOW THE Cl₂ SENSOR WORKS
Chlorine electrochemical sensors operate by reduction — the opposite of the oxidative reactions used in CO, H₂S, and SO₂ sensors. Chlorine, being a powerful oxidizing agent, readily accepts electrons at the working electrode (cathode). This makes the sensor inherently selective for oxidizing gases but also creates significant cross-sensitivity with other oxidizers.
Working electrode (reduction): Cl₂ + 2e⁻ → 2Cl⁻ Counter electrode (oxidation): H₂O → ½O₂ + 2H⁺ + 2e⁻ -- Cl₂ is reduced (gains electrons) at the working electrode -- This is the SAME reaction type as O₂ reduction in the galvanic O₂ cell -- Selective membrane and electrode potential distinguish Cl₂ from O₂ in a dedicated sensor
The Cl₂ sensor uses a specialized working electrode (typically carbon or platinum) held at a specific potential that favors Cl₂ reduction over O₂ reduction. However, because both reactions are chemically similar, cross-sensitivity between Cl₂ and O₂ sensors is unavoidable — the direction of the cross-sensitivity differs between the two sensor types.
Sensor Electrolyte Considerations
Cl₂ sensors typically use acidic or neutral electrolytes. Alkaline electrolytes (KOH) would react with Cl₂ to form hypochlorite, defeating the electrochemical detection mechanism. Instrument designs must balance chlorine-resistance of materials with detection sensitivity.
Section 03
HEALTH EFFECTS AND TOXICOLOGY
Chlorine is a severe respiratory and mucous membrane toxin. It reacts with moisture in airways to form hydrochloric acid (HCl) and hypochlorous acid (HOCl), causing direct oxidative and chemical damage. The upper respiratory tract provides some scrubbing protection at low concentrations, but significant alveolar damage can occur from moderate exposures.
| Concentration | Effect |
|---|---|
| 0.5 ppm | Odor threshold; mild eye and throat irritation (ACGIH TLV-C) |
| 1 ppm | Noticeable irritation; OSHA PEL ceiling; most persons will seek fresh air |
| 3 ppm | Severe mucous membrane irritation; lacrimation; coughing; NIOSH STEL |
| 4–6 ppm | Marked respiratory distress; immediate action required; NIOSH REL threshold exceeded |
| 10 ppm | IDLH — pulmonary edema develops; life-threatening within 30–60 min |
| 25 ppm | Rapid incapacitation; severe pulmonary edema; potentially fatal within minutes |
| >430 ppm | Lethal within 30 minutes (LC50 historical data) |
Mechanism of Injury
- Cl₂ + H₂O → HCl + HOCl — direct acid and oxidant formation in respiratory mucosa
- HOCl oxidizes cellular proteins and lipids — destroys alveolar-capillary membrane integrity
- Non-cardiogenic pulmonary edema — fluid floods alveoli, impairing gas exchange (can develop 2–24 hours post-exposure)
- Reflex laryngospasm at high concentrations — can cause rapid upper airway obstruction
Treatment
- Remove from exposure; 100% O₂
- Nebulized sodium bicarbonate (3–4%) — may relieve airway irritation and bronchospasm
- Nebulized N-acetylcysteine (off-label) — antioxidant support for oxidative airway damage
- Medical observation minimum 4–12 hours for all symptomatic exposures — delayed pulmonary edema
- No specific antidote; supportive care is the standard
Section 04
CROSS-SENSITIVITIES AND INTERFERENCES
Chlorine's cross-sensitivities are among the most operationally dangerous of all common hazmat gases. The O₂ sensor interference is life-safety critical and must be understood by every responder entering a chlorine environment.
| Sensor Channel | Effect of Cl₂ | Direction | Operational Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| O₂ Sensor | Cl₂ undergoes reduction at the O₂ cathode — sensor cannot distinguish Cl₂ from O₂ | O₂ reads FALSELY HIGH | O₂ deficiency may be masked. A reading of 21% O₂ could indicate actual O₂ well below 19.5%. Critical — use independent O₂ verification. |
| CO Sensor | Cl₂ can oxidize the CO working electrode — may cause false positive or sensor damage | CO reads HIGH or sensor fails | High-Cl₂ environments can poison CO sensors; CO readings unreliable in Cl₂ atmosphere |
| H₂S Sensor | Cl₂ strongly affects H₂S sensors — may read falsely positive | H₂S reads HIGH | Combined water treatment plant environments (ozonation, chlorination) — H₂S channel suspect |
| SO₂ Sensor | Cl₂ contributes to SO₂ electrode current | SO₂ reads HIGH | Both are present at paper mills and chemical plants — mutual interference |
| Cl₂ Sensor | — | Primary detection channel | Cl₂ sensor is selective but may respond to other oxidizing gases (O₃, NO₂, ClO₂) |
| NO₂ Sensor | Positive cross-sensitivity — NO₂ sensors also respond to Cl₂ due to similar oxidizing chemistry | NO₂ reads HIGH | Use dedicated Cl₂ sensor; NO₂ channel alone insufficient for chlorine characterization |
When the Cl₂ channel is alarming, treat O₂, CO, H₂S, and SO₂ readings as suspect. The O₂ false-high is the most dangerous: an apparent O₂ reading of 20.5% in a chlorine atmosphere could mask O₂ deficiency. If entering any Cl₂ environment, use SCBA regardless of O₂ reading.
Section 05
FAILURE MODES AND LIMITATIONS
Sensor Poisoning by Cl₂
High Cl₂ concentrations can irreversibly oxidize electrode materials and degrade electrolyte. Post-incident, always bump-test the Cl₂ sensor as well as all other sensor channels. A sensor that fails to respond to bump gas after Cl₂ exposure must be replaced — do not return to service.
Humidity and Cl₂ Solubility
Chlorine is moderately water-soluble and partially dissolves in high humidity, causing attenuation of sensor response. In fog, mist, or high-humidity environments, actual Cl₂ may be higher than the sensor indicates as some dissolves before reaching the electrode. Sample in drier conditions when possible; treat readings as minimum concentrations in high humidity.
Temperature Sensitivity
Cl₂ electrochemical sensors are moderately temperature-sensitive. Cold temperatures slow reduction kinetics, causing delayed and reduced response. Hot environments can accelerate background oxidation reactions, elevating baseline noise. Most instruments apply temperature compensation — verify operating range for extreme conditions.
False Zero After Cl₂ Exposure
After high-concentration Cl₂ exposure, the electrode surface may be temporarily or permanently altered. The sensor can read zero in the presence of Cl₂ if electrode active sites are depleted. This is the most dangerous failure mode — zero reading does not mean no chlorine. Bump-test after every significant exposure event.
Section 06
FIELD OPERATIONS AND BEST PRACTICES
Incident Approach — Cl₂ Heavier Than Air
Chlorine (MW 71) is 2.5× heavier than air and will flow downhill, into drains, and accumulate in low areas. Approach from uphill and upwind. Monitor for Cl₂ at ground level and in drainage pathways. Do not enter low areas, trenches, or basements without thorough air monitoring at the lowest point first.
SCBA Mandatory — Regardless of O₂ Reading
Because Cl₂ causes the O₂ sensor to overread, SCBA is mandatory in any confirmed Cl₂ environment regardless of what the O₂ channel displays. Air-purifying respirators with Cl₂ cartridges are only appropriate for low-concentration (<1 ppm) environments with well-characterized exposures and a functioning Cl₂ sensor confirmation.
ERG Guidance
- ERG Guide 124 — Gases: Oxidizing (including Cl₂ / UN 1017)
- Small spill initial isolation: 60 meters; large spill: 400 meters
- Large spill downwind evacuation: up to 11 km at night — one of the largest protective action distances in ERG
- Chlorine plumes hug the ground — evacuation routes must be uphill and upwind
Post-Incident Instrument Verification
- Bump-test Cl₂ channel AND all other channels (O₂, CO, H₂S) after any Cl₂ exposure event
- Allow 30-minute fresh air purge before bump-testing to clear dissolved Cl₂ from sensor membranes
- Any sensor that fails to respond to span gas must be replaced before next deployment
Section 07
REGULATIONS AND STANDARDS
| Agency | Limit | Value | Type |
|---|---|---|---|
| OSHA | PEL | 1 ppm | Ceiling (29 CFR 1910.1000 Table Z-1) |
| NIOSH | REL | 0.5 ppm | Ceiling (10-hr) |
| NIOSH | STEL | 1 ppm | 15-min ceiling |
| ACGIH | TLV-C | 0.5 ppm | Instantaneous ceiling |
| NIOSH | IDLH | 10 ppm | Immediately Dangerous |
| EPA | ERPG-2 | 3 ppm (1-hr) | Irreversible/serious health effects threshold |
Section 08
KNOWLEDGE CHECK
Question 1 of 6
Chlorine undergoes reduction at the electrochemical sensor working electrode. What is the correct half-reaction?
Question 2 of 6
Your multi-gas instrument reads O₂ at 21.2%, CO at 0 ppm, and Cl₂ at 3.5 ppm. What is the MOST critical concern about these readings?
Question 3 of 6
A pool facility worker mixed calcium hypochlorite (pool shock) with a pH decreaser (acid) in an enclosed pump room. Cl₂ is confirmed at 2 ppm. Which respiratory protection is appropriate for entry?
Question 4 of 6
Chlorine is heavier than air (MW 71). At a rail incident with a Cl₂ tank car leak, responders on the road should be positioned in which direction relative to the release?
Question 5 of 6
After a chlorine exposure event during entry, the Cl₂ sensor reads zero in fresh air. What is the correct interpretation?
Question 6 of 6
What is the approximate large-spill nighttime protective action distance for chlorine (UN 1017) per the ERG?