Spatiotemporal variability of tetrachloroethylene in residential indoor air due to vapor intrusion: A longitudinal, community-based study

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Abstract

The migration of volatile contaminants from groundwater and soil into indoor air is a potential health threat at thousands of contaminated sites acros. The country. This phenomenon, known as vapor intrusion, is characterized by spatial and temporal heterogeneity. This study examined short-term fluctuations in concentrations of tetrachloroethylene (PCE) i. The indoor air of residential homes due to vapor intrusion in a community in San Antonio, Texas, that sits atop an extensive, shallow plume of contaminated groundwater. Using a community-based design, we removed potential indoor sources of PCE and then collected twelve 3-day passive indoor air samples in each o. The 20 homes. Results demonstrated a one-order-of-magnitude variability in concentration across both space and time amon. The study homes, although all measured concentrations were below risk-based screening levels. We found that within any given home, indoor concentrations increase wit. The magnitude o. The barometric pressure drop (P=0.048) and humidity (P<0.001), while concentrations decrease as wind speed increases (P<0.001) and also during winter (P=0.001). In a second analysis to examine sources of spatial variability, we found that indoor air PCE concentrations between homes increase with groundwater concentration (P=0.030) and a slab-on-grade (as compared with a crawl space) foundation (P=0.028), whereas concentrations decrease in homes without air conditioners (P=0.015). This study offers insights int. The drivers of temporal and spatial variability in vapor intrusion that can inform decisions regarding monitoring and exposure assessment at affected sites.

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Johnston, J. E., & Gibson, J. M. (2014). Spatiotemporal variability of tetrachloroethylene in residential indoor air due to vapor intrusion: A longitudinal, community-based study. Journal of Exposure Science and Environmental Epidemiology, 24(6), 564–571. https://doi.org/10.1038/jes.2013.13

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