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Passive-Sampler-Based Bioavailability Assessment of PCB Congeners Associated with Aroclor-Containing Paint Chips in the Presence of Sediment

Archives of Environmental Contamination and Toxicology 2021 2 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Guilherme R. Lotufo, Philip T. Gidley, Andrew McQueen, David W. Moore, Deborah A. Edwards, Jeffery Hardenstine, Allen D. Uhler

Summary

Researchers studied how available (bioavailable) PCBs — toxic industrial chemicals — leach from paint chip fragments mixed into river sediment, finding that the tiniest paint chip particles released PCB concentrations over ten times higher than coarser chips, though overall availability remained lower than PCBs already embedded in field sediment, which has important implications for cleanup decisions at contaminated sites.

Study Type Environmental

This is the first investigation of the bioavailability of PCBs associated with paint chips (PC) dispersed in sediment. Bioavailability of PCB-containing PC in sediment was measured using ex situ polyethylene passive samplers (PS) and compared to that of PCBs from field-collected sediments. PC were mixed in freshwater sediment from a relatively uncontaminated site with no known PCB contamination sources and from a contaminated site with non-paint PCB sources. PC < 0.045 mm generated concentrations in the PS over one order of magnitude higher than coarser chips. The bioavailable fraction was represented by the polymer-sediment accumulation factor (PSAF), defined as the ratio of the PCB concentrations in the PS and organic carbon normalized sediment. The PSAF was similar for both field sediments. The PSAFs for the field sediments were ~ 50-60 and ~ 5 times higher than for the relatively uncontaminated sediment amended with PC for the size fractions 0.25-0.3 mm and < 0.045 mm, respectively. These results indicate much lower bioavailability for PCBs associated with PC compared to PCBs associated with field-collected sediment. Such information is essential for risk assessment and remediation decision-making for sites where contamination from non-paint PCBs sources is co-located with PCB PC.

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