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Inadvertently Generated PCBs in Consumer Products: Concentrations, Fate and Transport, and Preliminary Exposure Assessment.

Xiaoyu LiuMichelle R MullinPeter EgeghyKatherine A WoodwardKathleen C ComptonBrian NickelMarcus AguilarEdgar Folk Iv
Published in: Environmental science & technology (2022)
Although commercial polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) production was banned in 1979 under the Toxics Substance Control Act, inadvertent generation of PCBs through a variety of chemical production processes continues to contaminate products and waste streams. In this research, a total of 39 consumer products purchased from local and online retailer stores were analyzed for 209 PCB congeners. Inadvertent PCBs (iPCBs) were detected from seven products, and PCB-11 was the only congener detected in most of the samples, with a maximum concentration exceeding 800 ng/g. Emission of PCB-11 to air was studied from one craft foam sheet product using dynamic microchambers at 40 °C for about 120 days. PCB-11 migration from the product to house dust was also investigated. The IAQX program was then employed to estimate the emissions of PCB-11 from 10 craft foam sheets to indoor air in a 30 m 3 room at 0.5 h -1 air change rate for 30 days. The predicted maximum PCB-11 concentration in the room air (156.8 ng/m 3 ) and the measured concentration in dust (20 ng/g) were applied for the preliminary exposure assessment. The generated data from multipathway investigation in this work should be informative for further risk assessment and management for iPCBs.
Keyphrases
  • risk assessment
  • health information
  • human health
  • health risk
  • heavy metals
  • healthcare
  • polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons
  • climate change
  • electronic health record
  • drinking water
  • atomic force microscopy