Subscriber access provided by READING UNIV
Article
Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFASs) in indoor air and dust from homes and various microenvironments in China: Implications for human exposure Yiming Yao, Yangyang Zhao, Hongwen Sun, Shuai Chang, Lingyan Zhu, Alfredo Carlos Alder, and Kurunthachalam Kannan Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.7b04971 • Publication Date (Web): 08 Feb 2018 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on February 15, 2018
Just Accepted “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been peer-reviewed and accepted for publication. They are posted online prior to technical editing, formatting for publication and author proofing. The American Chemical Society provides “Just Accepted” as a service to the research community to expedite the dissemination of scientific material as soon as possible after acceptance. “Just Accepted” manuscripts appear in full in PDF format accompanied by an HTML abstract. “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been fully peer reviewed, but should not be considered the official version of record. They are citable by the Digital Object Identifier (DOI®). “Just Accepted” is an optional service offered to authors. Therefore, the “Just Accepted” Web site may not include all articles that will be published in the journal. After a manuscript is technically edited and formatted, it will be removed from the “Just Accepted” Web site and published as an ASAP article. Note that technical editing may introduce minor changes to the manuscript text and/or graphics which could affect content, and all legal disclaimers and ethical guidelines that apply to the journal pertain. ACS cannot be held responsible for errors or consequences arising from the use of information contained in these “Just Accepted” manuscripts.
Environmental Science & Technology is published by the American Chemical Society. 1155 Sixteenth Street N.W., Washington, DC 20036 Published by American Chemical Society. Copyright © American Chemical Society. However, no copyright claim is made to original U.S. Government works, or works produced by employees of any Commonwealth realm Crown government in the course of their duties.
Page 1 of 31
Environmental Science & Technology
1
Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFASs)
2
in indoor air and dust from homes and
3
various
4
Implications for human exposure
microenvironments
in
China:
5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16
Yiming Yao,a,1 Yangyang Zhao,a,1 Hongwen Sun,*,a Shuai Chang,a Lingyan Zhu,a Alfredo C. Alder,a,b Kurunthachalam Kannanc a MOE Key Laboratory of Pollution Processes and Environmental Criteria, College of Environmental Science and Engineering, Nankai University, Tianjin 300071, China. 38 Tongyan Road, Jinnan District, Tianjin 300350, China TEL: 86-22-23509241, Email:
[email protected] b Eawag, Swiss Federal Institute of Environmental Science and Technology, 8600 Dübendorf, Switzerland c Wadsworth Center, New York State Department of Health, and Department of Environmental Health Sciences, School of Public Health, State University of New York at Albany, Albany, NY 12201, USA 1 Equally contribution
17
ABSTRACT
18
A newly developed solid-phase extraction cartridge composed of mixed sorbents
19
was optimized for collection of both neutral and ionizable per- and polyfluoroalkyl
20
substances (PFASs) in indoor air. Eighty-one indoor air samples and 29 indoor dust
21
samples were collected from rooms of homes and hotels, textile shops, and cinemas in
22
Tianjin, China. Fluorotelomer alcohols (FTOHs) were the predominant PFASs found
23
in air (250-82,300 pg/m3) and hotel dust (24.8-678 ng/g). Polyfluoroalkyl phosphoric
24
acid diesters were found at lower levels of n.d.-125 pg/m3 in air and 0.32-183 ng/g in
25
dust. Perfluoroalkyl carboxylic acids (PFCAs) were dominant ionizable PFASs in air
26
samples (121-20,600 pg/m3) with C4-C7 PFCAs contributing to 54%±17% of the
27
profiles, suggesting an ongoing shift to short-chain PFASs. Long-chain PFCAs (C>7)
28
were strongly correlated and the intermediate metabolite of FTOHs, fluorotelomer
29
unsaturated carboxylic acids, occurred in all the air samples at concentrations up to 1
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
30
413 pg/m3, suggesting the transformation of precursors such as FTOHs in indoor
31
environment. Daily intake of ΣPFASs via air inhalation and dust ingestion was
32
estimated at 1.04-14.1 ng/kg bw/d and 0.10-8.17 ng/kg bw/d, respectively,
33
demonstrating that inhalation of air with fine suspended particles was a more
34
important direct exposure pathway than dust ingestion for PFASs to adults.
35
ABSTRACT ART
36
37 38
2
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 2 of 31
Page 3 of 31
Environmental Science & Technology
39
1. INTRODUCTION
40
Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFASs) are a family of synthetic
41
compounds extensively applied in industrial processes and commercial products as
42
protective coatings for fabrics and metals, and as additives in fire-fighting foams, due
43
to their surface activity, and thermal and chemical stability.1,
44
perfluoroalkane sulfonic acids (PFSAs, n ≥ 6) and perfluoroalkyl carboxylic acids
45
(PFCAs, n ≥ 7) are persistent and bioaccumulative and have been ubiquitously
46
detected in food,
47
associated with hepatotoxicity, reproductive toxicity, developmental toxicity, and
48
immunotoxicity.9, 10
3, 4
2
Long-chain
drinking water,5, 6 and human specimens.7, 8 PFASs exposure is
49
The phase-out of C8 PFASs has been implemented in most developed
50
countries,11, 12 where shifting to shorter-chain PFASs and other alternatives has led to
51
their increasing levels in environmental matrices and progressive human exposure
52
risk.13 Meanwhile, the production and application of legacy long-chain perfluoroalkyl
53
acids (PFAAs) and their precursor fluorotelomer alcohols (FTOHs) rehabilitated in
54
mainland China.2 In China, perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) was found dominant in
55
both indoor and outdoor dust around a fluorochemical industrial park.14 Dominating
56
air emission of long-chain PFASs was found at a textile manufacturing although
57
short-chain PFASs were claimed to be used.15 Moreover, the product profiles of
58
short-chain substitutes may vary between countries. The emission profiles of PFASs
59
in China may be unique and more complicated due to a co-occurrence of PFASs with
60
different chain lengths in final consumer products. Therefore, exposure to PFASs in
61
residential places is of primary interest. Besides, the occurrence of PFASs in public
62
places where PFAS-containing products are stored, sold or used may also raise
63
concerns for occupational exposure risk and is yet to be clarified in China.
64
In addition to ingestion through diet and drinking water,16-18 indoor air inhalation
65
and dust ingestion are major pathways of human exposure to PFASs.19 As for PFAAs, 3
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
66
which are most concerned PFASs due to their persistence and toxicity, apart from
67
direct uptake of from the environment,20 inhalation of volatile precursors including
68
FTOHs and perfluorooctane sulfonamidoethanols/sulfonamides (FOSE/FOSAs) and
69
subsequent internal biotransformation also contributes to human exposure to PFAAs
70
(called as indirect uptake). FTOHs and polyfluoroalkyl phosphoric acid diesters
71
(diPAPs) of newly concern have been shown to be metabolized in human and rodents
72
to produce PFCAs,21-24 whereas biotransformation of FOSE/FOSAs in vivo can yield
73
perfluorooctane sulfonic acid (PFOS).25, 26 Till now, the direct uptake of PFAAs in
74
indoor dust has been well documented, however, a direct exposure to PFAAs via air
75
inhalation has been less emphasized on. The ionizable PFASs (i.e. PFAAs) can be
76
enriched in fine particles (< 5 µm)27 that may as well undergo pulmonary uptake.
77
Even so, limited studies have simultaneously investigated the occurrence of both
78
neutral and ionizable PFASs in indoor air,28, 29 whereas ionizable PFASs have been
79
frequently detected in indoor dust.20, 30, 31 This knowledge gap presents considerable
80
uncertainty in exposure and risk assessment of human exposure to PFAAs. Therefore,
81
simultaneous investigation on both neutral and ionizable PFASs in air and paired dust
82
samples is indispensable for a comprehensive and accurate exposure assessment in
83
indoor environment.
84
A suitable sampling technique is crucial for simultaneous and accurate collection
85
and measurement of both neutral and ionizable PFASs in air. Both passive (XAD-4
86
impregnated polyurethane foam (PUF) disks in steel housings)32 and active samplers
87
(glass column containing XAD-2 resin sandwiched between two PUF plugs) have
88
been used for air monitoring of PFASs.33 However, sampling using these two types of
89
samplers either requires much space or takes a long sampling time, which are primary
90
drawbacks when sampling indoor air. Besides, these two techniques require tedious
91
pre-sampling and extraction processes, which might incur contamination of target
92
chemicals. Apart from these two types of samplers, solid-phase extraction (SPE)
93
cartridge is portable, flexible, and feasible for indoor air collection. A low-volume
94
SPE sampler (Isolute ENV+ SPE cartridges) was initially developed for volatile 4
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 4 of 31
Page 5 of 31
Environmental Science & Technology
95
neutral PFASs,34 but its use for the collection of ionizable PFASs was not validated.35
96
Therefore, it is necessary to develop a new type of SPE sampler that would enrich
97
both neutral and ionizable PFASs including diPAPs in ambient air from indoor
98
environments.
99
In the present study, a new type of SPE sampler composed of two kinds of
100
sorbents was initially developed to enable simultaneous collection of the totality of
101
neutral PFASs, ionizable PFASs, and diPAPs in indoor air. Sampling campaign was
102
conducted in different kinds of rooms of residential and hotel buildings, and
103
microenvironments of public places (cinemas/outdoor equipment/textile shops);
104
paired indoor dust samples of some sites were also collected and analyzed. The aims
105
of this study were to determine the occurrence and composition profiles of PFASs in
106
different indoor environments, to elucidate potential influencing factors on indoor
107
profiles of PFASs based on different room setups, as well as to evaluate human
108
exposure to PFASs via air inhalation and dust ingestion. Our results may provide
109
further information on exposure pathways and clarify exposure risks in various
110
microenvironments in China.
111
2. MATERIALS AND METHODS
112
2.1. Sample Collection.
113
Airborne PFASs were collected on a SPE cartridge, which was initially
114
developed and optimized for the target analytes (Table S1 in supporting
115
information(SI)). The SPE cartridge (6 mL) consisted of two layers of absorbents: the
116
upper layer of HC-C18 (250 mg) for trapping mainly neutral PFASs and the bottom
117
layer of WAX (250 mg) for trapping ionizable PFASs. A diaphragm vacuum pump
118
(Jinteng, GM-0.33A) was used for pumping air consecutively through the HC-C18
119
and WAX layers of absorbents. The validation of the sampling device including
120
extraction efficiency, breakthrough, and micro-chamber spiking tests was given in the
121
SI. 5
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
122
Indoor air sampling was performed in Tianjin, China, in the summer (June-September)
123
of 2015 in standard rooms of 13 hotels, living rooms of 19 homes, and
124
microenvironments of 13 public places. Nine living rooms of the homes were
125
resampled in the winter (December) for comparison of PFAS concentrations between
126
the two seasons. The public places included 5 outdoor equipment shops (OS) that sell
127
outdoor wear, 3 curtain shops (CurS), 2 carpet shops (CarS), and 3 cinemas, where the
128
goods sold or decorations used were thought to be potential sources of PFASs. The
129
details of indoor air sampling are given in Table S2. Prior to assembly, the SPE
130
cartridges were sequentially conditioned with methanol and ethyl acetate and wrapped
131
in aluminum foil sealed in polyethylene plastic (PP) bags. For sampling, two
132
cartridges were connected to the pump in parallel to reduce the loading pressure and
133
to increase sampling efficiency. Indoor air about 1 m above the floor was collected at
134
an initial sampling rate of 4.5 L/min for 8-12 h to reach a volume of 2.16-3.24 m3. In
135
some cases, sampling time was extended for convenience that gave a sampling
136
volume up to 8.33 m3. At some public places, due to logical constraints, sampling
137
time was less than 8 h but that volume was sufficient for the quantification of PFASs
138
(Table S2). After sampling, the cartridges were detached on site, wrapped and sealed
139
in aluminum foil and PP bags, transported to the laboratory, and kept at -20 °C before
140
extraction.
141
In summer, a total of 11 hotel and 18 home dust samples were collected within
142
the period of air sampling. The dust samples from hotels were collected from dust
143
bags in vacuum cleaners and those from homes were collected using a pre-cleaned
144
disposable bristle brush from multiple sites on surfaces of furniture and floor. The
145
sampled areas were all kept from cleaning at least for one week. All dust samples
146
were directly swept into PP tubes, sealed in PP bags, and kept at -20 °C until analysis.
147
Neutral PFASs were analyzed using GC-MS, while ionizable PFASs were
148
analyzed using HPLC-MS/MS. Details of chemical information, sample pretreatment,
149
and instrumental analysis are provided in SI. 6
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 6 of 31
Page 7 of 31
Environmental Science & Technology
150
2.2. Calculation of Daily Intake.
151
Direct and indirect exposure pathways to PFASs via indoor air inhalation and
152
dust ingestion were estimated for toddlers (1-2 years) and adults (>20 years) using the
153
following equations: 36
154
Eair = (Cair × Vair × Fuptake × Ymeta) / (mbw × 1000)
(1)
155
Edust = (Cdust × Qdust × Fuptake × Ymeta) / (mbw × 1000)
(2)
156
where Eair (ng/kg bw/d) and Edust (ng/kg bw/d) are the estimated daily intakes of
157
PFASs through indoor air and dust samples, respectively; Cair (pg/m3) is PFAS
158
concentration in air samples; Cdust (ng/g) is PFAS concentration in dust samples; Vair
159
(m3/d) is daily inhalation volume; Qdust (mg/d) is dust ingestion rate; Fuptake is uptake
160
fraction (unitless); For estimation of indirect exposure, Ymeta was introduced as a
161
factor to account for metabolic yield (mass basis, unitless) of PFAAs from precursors
162
and mbw is body weight (kg).
163
For direct exposure assessment, two scenarios were considered: an average-case
164
scenario with measured median PFAS concentrations and a worst-case scenario with
165
95th percentile concentrations. Daily inhalation volume was kept constant between the
166
two scenarios (Vair, 8.0 m3/d and 15.7 m3/d for toddlers and adults, respectively);
167
median dust ingestion rates were used for average-case scenario (Qdust, 60 mg/d and
168
30 mg/d for toddlers and adults, respectively) and high rates for the worst-case
169
scenario (200 mg/d and 100 mg/d for toddlers and adults, respectively).35, 37-39 Due to
170
the lack of adequate pharmacokinetic data, pulmonary and gastrointestinal uptake
171
fractions (Fuptake unitless) in both scenarios were assumed to be 100% for all PFASs,
172
which was usually adopted in other studies.20,
173
recommended in Korean Exposure Factors Handbook were 11.7 kg and 62.8 kg for
174
toddlers and adults, respectively. These values adopted for Korean population were
175
more appropriate for the Chinese population than those from the western countries.43
40-42
7
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
The mean body weights
Environmental Science & Technology
176
For
indirect
exposure,
metabolic
yield
(Ymeta)
Page 8 of 31
values 44, 45
that
represent
177
biotransformation of 8:2 FTOH to PFOA were proposed.22,
178
0.0027 (mass basis) was used for human studies, and this value was fitted in the
179
average-case exposure scenario.42 For the worst-case exposure scenario, instead of
180
assuming a 100% transformation yield, a value of 0.05 (Ymeta) was used as a
181
conservative estimation, which was so far the highest yield of those used in previous
182
studies.46 As for 8:2 diPAP, a value of 0.1, which was obtained from an in vivo rodent
183
study, was used for Ymeta in average-case exposure scenario,47 whereas that for the
184
worst-case scenario was 1.
185
2.3. Quality Control and Quality Assurance.
A Ymeta value of
186
Procedure blanks consisting of SPE cartridges fortified with internal standards
187
were extracted with each batch of samples to evaluate potential analytical
188
interferences or possible carryover of the target chemicals between samples. During
189
analysis, a calibration standard and an instrumental blank were injected between each
190
batch of 20 samples to check instrumental performance. Quantification was
191
performed using an eight-point calibration curve (200-50,000 pg/mL) spiked with 5
192
ng of each internal standard as same as those in air and dust samples. The regression
193
coefficients (R2) of the standard calibration curves were ≥ 0.99 for all target analytes.
194
For samples with PFAS signals above the highest point of the calibration curve, the
195
extracts were re-analyzed after dilution. Method detection limits (MDLs) were set at
196
three times the standard deviation (SD) of values found in procedural blanks, if the
197
analyte was present in the blank; otherwise limits of quantification (LOQ) was
198
derived from the peak values with a signal-to-noise ratio (S/N) of 10. The MDL
199
values for each analyte are given in Table S3. Most of the target analytes were not
200
found in procedural and instrumental blanks. PFOA was detected in procedural blanks
201
but correction to concentrations in samples was not made because the background
202
level was far below the concentrations found in samples in this study (Table S3).
203
Recoveries of PFASs spiked into home and hotel dust ranged from 90% to 110%, with 8
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 9 of 31
Environmental Science & Technology
204
the exception of FTOHs in hotel dust, which were between 60% and 65% (Table S4).
205
For cartridge validation, extraction efficiency for neutral and ionizable PFASs
206
successively was achieved with ethyl acetate and 0.5% NH4OH/MeOH solution at
207
79-123% (Table S5) and no significant breakthrough was observed (Table S6-1). In
208
the micro-chamber test at the spiking level of 5 ng, the recoveries of neutral and
209
ionizable PFASs were 45-87% and 68-102%, respectively (Table S6-2).
210
2.4. Statistical analysis.
211
Non-detected analytes were assigned with a value of zero and incorporated into
212
statistical analysis. Concentrations below the MDLs were taken as left-censored data
213
and the dataset was treated with robust regression on order statistics for median
214
calculation. Spearman rank correlation analysis and Mann-Whitney Test were
215
conducted using IBM SPSS Statistics 22. Prior to analysis, concentrations were
216
natural log-transformed. Pearson’s correlation was only conducted for ventilation test.
217
The hierarchical cluster analysis and heatmap were conducted and created using R
218
3.4.3 with agglomeration method of Ward.D (Euclidean). All other illustrations
219
presented on this manuscript were created using OriginLab OriginPro 2016.
220
3. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
221
3.1. PFASs in Air Samples
222
Hotel and Residential Buildings. For neutral PFASs, FTOHs were more frequently
223
detected than FOSE/FOSAs in hotels (100% vs. 68%) and homes (100% vs. 27%), at
224
similar median levels of 3,330 and 3,210 pg/m3, respectively (Fig. 1A and Table 1).
225
8:2 FTOH was the dominant FTOH homologue. The highest concentration of
226
ΣFTOHs was 62,100 pg/m3 found in a hotel room. In comparison, the concentrations
227
of ΣFOSE/FOSAs were 1 to 3 orders of magnitude lower and the highest
228
concentration found was 2,460 pg/m3 in a hotel room. DiPAPs were present in 53%
229
and 77% of the hotel and home samples, with much lower median levels at 1.08 9
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
230
Page 10 of 31
pg/m3 and 1.17 pg/m3, respectively.
231
PFCAs and PFSAs were ionizable and found occurring in most samples (Table
232
S7). Detection of ionizable PFASs was also reported in the literature in indoor air and
233
the atmosphere using low-volume or passive air samplers.28,
234
partially be due to that the finest suspended particles (< 5 µm) was sampled together
235
with air. Due to their particular affinity to glass fiber filters, it is not likely to
236
differentiate ionizable PFASs between gas and particle phases with them.49 Moreover,
237
to account for this total levels in the bulk air is important for health risk assessment.50
238
The medians of ΣPFCAs (C4-C12) in hotels and homes were 563 pg/m3 and 691
239
pg/m3, respectively (Fig. 1A). In most cases, PFOA was the dominant long-chain
240
PFCA (39.0-378 pg/m3), while in some homes, perfluorononanoic acid (PFNA) was
241
dominating at concentrations of 182-380 pg/m3. The concentrations of short-chain
242
PFCAs (C4-C7) were significantly higher in homes than in hotels (p