4.8 Article

Indoor residential exposure to semivolatile organic compounds in France

Journal

ENVIRONMENT INTERNATIONAL
Volume 109, Issue -, Pages 81-88

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envint.2017.08.024

Keywords

Aggregate exposure; Cumulative exposure; Chemicals; Monte Carlo simulation; Indoor air quality; Dermal exposure

Funding

  1. Agence de lapos
  2. Environnement et de la Maitrise de lapos
  3. energie [TEZ14-36]
  4. Fondation de France [2014-00053331]

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Multiple chemicals are emitted in residential accommodation. Aggregate Daily Doses (ADD) (ng/kg-bw/d) w ere estimated for 32 semivolatile organic compounds (SVOCs) of different chemical families that are frequently detected in French dwellings in both air and settled dust. Daily doses were determined using steady-state models for the population, categorized into 11 age groups covering birth to age 30. Three routes of exposure were taken into account: dust ingestion, inhalation (gaseous and particulate phases) and dermal contact with the gaseous phase of air. Contamination levels w ere preferentially retrieved from large, nationwide representative datasets. A two-dimensional probabilistic approach was used to assess parametric uncertainty and identify the most in fluential factors. For children aged 2 to 3 years, ADD estimates spanned orders o f magnitude, with median values ranging from 8.7 pg/kg-bw/d for 2,2',3,4,4'-pentabromodiphenylether (BDE 85) to 1.3 V mu g/kg-bw/d for di-iso-butyl phthalate (DiBP). Inhalation, ingestion and dermal pathway contributed at varying levels, and depending on compound, air was the dominant medium for 28 of the 32 compounds (either b y inhalation or dermal contact). Indoor exposure estimate variance was mainly driven by indoor contamination variability, and secondarily by uncertainty in physical and chemical parameters. These findings lend support to the call for cumulative risk assessment of indoor SVOCs.

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