4.8 Article

Airborne PCBs and OH-PCBs Inside and Outside Urban and Rural US Schools

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 51, Issue 14, Pages 7853-7860

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.7b01910

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Funding

  1. NIH [P42ES013661, P30ES005605]

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PCBs appear in school air because many school buildings were built when PCBs were still intentionally added to building materials and because PCBs are also present through inadvertent production in modern pigment. This is of concern because children are especially vulnerable to the toxic effects of PCBs. Here we report indoor and outdoor air concentrations of PCBs and OH-PCBs from two rural schools and four urban schools, the latter near a PCB-contaminated waterway of Lake Michigan in the United States. Samples (n = 108) were collected as in/out pairs using polyurethane foam passive air samplers (PUF-PAS) from January 2012 to November 2015. Samples were analyzed using GC/MS-MS for all 209 PCBs and 72 OH-PCBs. Concentrations inside schools were 1-2 orders of magnitude higher than outdoors and ranged from 0.5 to 194 ng/m(3) (PCBs) and from 4 to 665 pg/m(3) (OH-PCBs). Congener profiles were similar within each sampling location across season but different between schools and indicated the sources as Aroclors from building materials and individual PCBs associated with modern pigment. This study is the first cohort-specific analysis to show that some children's PCB inhalation exposure may be equal to or higher than their exposure through diet.

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