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Co-Existence of Organophosphate Di- and Tri-Esters in House Dust from South China and Midwestern United States: Implications for Human Exposure.

Hongli TanLiu YangYunjiang YuQingxia GuanXiaotu LiuLiangzhong LiDa Chen
Published in: Environmental science & technology (2019)
Despite numerous studies on the contamination of organophosphate triesters (tri-OPEs) in indoor environments, organophosphate diesters (di-OPEs) have rarely been investigated. The present study aimed to investigate whether di-OPEs coexist with tri-OPEs in house dust collected from Guangzhou ( n = 30), South China and the city of Carbondale ( n = 17) located in the Midwestern United States (U.S.). Median concentrations of bis(2-butoxyethyl) phosphate (BBOEP), bis(1-chloro-2-propyl) phosphate (BCIPP), bis(1,3-dichloro-2-propyl) phosphate (BDCIPP), bis(2-ethylhexyl) phosphate (BEHP), bis(2-methylphenyl phosphate) (BMPP), and diphenyl phosphate (DPHP) were determined to be 15.9, < LOQ, 33.6, 654, 9.5, and 605 ng/g in South China house dust, and 1580, 90.6, 234, 867, 4.0, and 6500 ng/g in Midwestern U.S. dust, respectively. The total concentrations of di-OPEs (referred to ΣdiOPEs) constituted an average of 22.9% and 21.3% of the total concentrations of tri-OPEs in dust from these two locations, respectively. Median concentration ratios of DPHP and BEHP to their respective tri-OPEs (i.e., TPHP and TEHP) were determined to be 1.1 and 1.0 in South China dust and 3.7 and 1.4 in Midwestern U.S. dust, respectively, indicating possible commercial applications for these two di-OPEs. Correlative analyses reveal chemical- and region-specific relationships between di-OPEs and their respective tri-OPEs, suggesting that the relative importance of different sources (e.g., direct commercial use, impurity in tri-OPE formulas, and tri-OPE degradation) could vary for different di-OPEs. Our findings demonstrate wide occurrences of di-OPEs in an indoor environment from the studied locations and raise concerns on human exposure to dust associated di-OPEs. Future studies are needed to explore more possible di-OPEs in indoor environments and elucidate their sources, human exposure pathways, and toxicokinetics.
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