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Citation
Tags
HERO ID
2215662
Reference Type
Journal Article
Title
Emissions of two phthalate esters and BDE 209 to indoor air and their impact on urban air quality
Author(s)
Cousins, AP; Holmgren, T; Remberger, M
Year
2014
Is Peer Reviewed?
1
Journal
Science of the Total Environment
ISSN:
0048-9697
EISSN:
1879-1026
Publisher
Elsevier
Location
AMSTERDAM
Volume
470-471
Issue
Elsevier
Page Numbers
527-535
Language
English
PMID
24176700
DOI
10.1016/j.scitotenv.2013.10.023
Web of Science Id
WOS:000331415600057
URL
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0048969713011674
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Abstract
Estimated emissions of decabrominated diphenyl ether (BDE 209) and the two phthalate esters diethylhexyl phthalate (DEHP) and diisononyl phthalate (DINP) to indoor air in the Stockholm conurbation, Sweden were used to assess the contribution of chemical outflows from the indoor environment to urban outdoor air pollution for these substances, by applying the recently developed Stockholm MUltimedia URban fate (SMURF) model. Emission rates of DINP from PVC materials were measured and published emission rates of DEHP were adapted to Swedish conditions. These were used as input to the model, as well as recently reported estimates of BDE 209 emissions to indoor air in Stockholm. Model predicted concentrations were compared to empirical monitoring data obtained from the literature and from additional measurements of phthalates in ventilation outlets and urban air performed in the current study. The predicted concentrations of the phthalates DINP and DEHP in indoor air and dust were within a factor of 1.5-10 of the measured concentrations. For BDE 209, predicted indoor concentrations were within the measured ranges, but measured concentrations showed a much larger variability. An adjusted emission scenario to better fit observed concentrations indoors was employed for DEHP and final outcomes resulted in estimated indoor emissions of 250 (50-1250), 2.9 (0.58-15), and 0.068 (0.014-0.34) kg year(-1) for DEHP, DINP and BDE 209. These emissions could not explain the observed concentrations in urban air of the phthalates, suggesting an underestimation of background inflow or existence of additional sources in the outdoor environment. For BDE 209, the assessment indicates that the Stockholm indoor environment contributes about 25% to the air pollution load in inflowing background air, but additional monitoring data in urban air are needed to confirm this conclusion.
Keywords
Emission; Polyvinylchloride; Urban model; Exposure; Ventilation; Fate
Tags
•
Diisononyl Phthalate (DINP)
Literature Search
LitSearch May 2013
Web of Science
DINP Jan 2014 update
Pubmed
LitSearch Jan 2014 - July 2014
PubMed
LitSearch July 2014 - Feb 2015
WOS
Excluded: No Primary Data on Health Effects
Miscellaneous
Exposure levels
Manufacture/use
NAAQS
•
ISA-PM (2019)
OPPT REs
•
OPPT_Cyclic Aliphatic Bromine Cluster (HBCD)_C. Engineering
Data screening total
Screening: Excluded
•
OPPT_Cyclic Aliphatic Bromine Cluster (HBCD)_D. Exposure
Total – title/abstract screening
Off topic
•
OPPT_Cyclic Aliphatic Bromine Cluster (HBCD)_E. Fate
Total – title/abstract screening
Off topic
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