4.7 Article

Legacy and novel flame retardants from indoor dust in Antarctica: Sources and human exposure

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH
Volume 196, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.envres.2020.110344

Keywords

PBDEs; HBCDs; Novel FRs; DPs; Antarctic research facilities; Dust

Funding

  1. Project SENTINEL [CTM2015-70535-P]
  2. Projects ANID-FONDECYT [1130329, 1161673, 11150548]
  3. Projects ANID-FONDAP [15110027, ANID-PIA-INACh-ACT192057]
  4. Project INACH [RT_08_13]
  5. British Antarctic Survey-Ecosystems Team
  6. RECETOX research infrastructure (Czech Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports) [LM2018121]
  7. RECETOX Research Infrastructure [CZ.02.1.01/0.0/0.0/16_013/0001761]
  8. Horizon2020 [857560]
  9. Czech Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports [02.1.01/0.0/0.0/18_046/0015975]
  10. POLARCSIC
  11. TERNUA

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The low air humidity in Antarctica necessitates the use of flame retardants in research facilities to prevent fires. Different types and concentrations of flame retardants were found in dust samples from various research stations and rooms.
The air humidity in Antarctica is very low and this peculiar weather parameter make the use of flame retardants in research facilities highly needed for safety reasons, as fires are a major risk. Legacy and novel flame retardants (nFRs) including polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs), hexabromocyclododecanes (HBCDs), 1,2-bis(2,4,6tribromophenoxy) ethane (BTBPE), Dechlorane Plus (DP), and other nFRs were measured in indoor dust samples collected at research Stations in Antarctica: Gabriel de Castilla, Spain (GCS), Julio Escudero, Chile (JES), and onboard the RRS James Clark Ross, United Kingdom (RRS JCR). The GC-HRMS and LC-MS-MS analyses of dust samples revealed ?7PBDEs of 41.5 ? 43.8 ng/g in rooms at GCS, 18.7 ? 11.6 ng/g at JES, and 27.2 ? 37.9 ng/g onboard the RRS JCR. PBDE pattern was different between the sites and most abundant congeners were BDE-183 (40%) at GCS, BDE-99 (50%) at JES, and BDE-153 (37%) onboard the RRS JCR. The ?(4)HBCDs were 257 ? 407 ng/g, 14.9 ? 14.5 ng/g, and 761 ? 1043 ng/g in indoor dust collected in rooms at GCS, JES, and RRS JCR, respectively. The ?9nFRs were 224 ? 178 ng/g at GCS, 14.1 ? 13.8 ng/g at JES, and 194 ? 392 ng/g on the RRS JCR. Syn- and anti-DP were detected in most of the samples and both isomers showed the highest concentrations at GCS: 163 ? 93.6 and 48.5 ? 61.1 ng/g, respectively. The laboratory and living room showed the highest concentration of HBCDs, DPs, BTBPE. The wide variations in FR levels in dust from the three research facilities and between differently used rooms reflect the different origin of furnishing, building materials and equipment. The potential health risk associated to a daily exposure via dust ingestion was assessed for selected FRs: BDEs 47, 99, and 153, ?-, ?-, and ?-HBCD, BTBPE, syn- and anti-DP. Although the estimated exposures are below the available reference doses, caution is needed given the expected increasing use of novel chemicals without a comprehensive toxicological profile.

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