Vapor Intrusion: The Pathway of Greatest Potential Risk

For properties contaminated with volatile organic compounds, the pathway of greatest potential human health risk is often subsurface vapor intrusion to indoor air, also known as the vapor intrusion (VI) pathway. On average, people inhale about 20,000 L of air each day, compared to drinking only abou...

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Main Authors: Todd McAlary, Derek W. Tomlinson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Associação Brasileira de Águas Subterrâneas 2011-01-01
Series:Revista Águas Subterrâneas
Online Access:https://aguassubterraneas.abas.org/asubterraneas/article/view/28181
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spelling doaj-1ddb9e263bfb496f8ffcf88abd0b52572020-11-24T21:54:37ZengAssociação Brasileira de Águas SubterrâneasRevista Águas Subterrâneas0101-70042179-97842011-01-010016765Vapor Intrusion: The Pathway of Greatest Potential RiskTodd McAlary0Derek W. Tomlinson1Geosyntec Consultants, Inc.Geosyntec Consultants, Inc.For properties contaminated with volatile organic compounds, the pathway of greatest potential human health risk is often subsurface vapor intrusion to indoor air, also known as the vapor intrusion (VI) pathway. On average, people inhale about 20,000 L of air each day, compared to drinking only about 2L of water or ingesting a few grams of soil, which means the risk-based target concentrations for indoor air must be very, very low compared to other media. As a result, the methods used for sampling and analysis must be more careful to avoid bias from equipment contamination. Furthermore, there are several common chemicals that are often present in indoor air from consumer products and building materials, so background sources commonly complicate the interpretation of indoor air data. The indoor air concentrations also tend to be highly variable over time in response to changes in pressure gradients caused by natural barometric pressure changes, wind, water table fluctuations, and building ventilation systems. Spatial variability and geologic complexity also make soil gas sampling challenging. This paper presents new sampling methods and techniques to minimize the bias and variability in the data collected to assess the VI pathway and new methods for designing cost-effective mitigation systems.https://aguassubterraneas.abas.org/asubterraneas/article/view/28181
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Todd McAlary
Derek W. Tomlinson
spellingShingle Todd McAlary
Derek W. Tomlinson
Vapor Intrusion: The Pathway of Greatest Potential Risk
Revista Águas Subterrâneas
author_facet Todd McAlary
Derek W. Tomlinson
author_sort Todd McAlary
title Vapor Intrusion: The Pathway of Greatest Potential Risk
title_short Vapor Intrusion: The Pathway of Greatest Potential Risk
title_full Vapor Intrusion: The Pathway of Greatest Potential Risk
title_fullStr Vapor Intrusion: The Pathway of Greatest Potential Risk
title_full_unstemmed Vapor Intrusion: The Pathway of Greatest Potential Risk
title_sort vapor intrusion: the pathway of greatest potential risk
publisher Associação Brasileira de Águas Subterrâneas
series Revista Águas Subterrâneas
issn 0101-7004
2179-9784
publishDate 2011-01-01
description For properties contaminated with volatile organic compounds, the pathway of greatest potential human health risk is often subsurface vapor intrusion to indoor air, also known as the vapor intrusion (VI) pathway. On average, people inhale about 20,000 L of air each day, compared to drinking only about 2L of water or ingesting a few grams of soil, which means the risk-based target concentrations for indoor air must be very, very low compared to other media. As a result, the methods used for sampling and analysis must be more careful to avoid bias from equipment contamination. Furthermore, there are several common chemicals that are often present in indoor air from consumer products and building materials, so background sources commonly complicate the interpretation of indoor air data. The indoor air concentrations also tend to be highly variable over time in response to changes in pressure gradients caused by natural barometric pressure changes, wind, water table fluctuations, and building ventilation systems. Spatial variability and geologic complexity also make soil gas sampling challenging. This paper presents new sampling methods and techniques to minimize the bias and variability in the data collected to assess the VI pathway and new methods for designing cost-effective mitigation systems.
url https://aguassubterraneas.abas.org/asubterraneas/article/view/28181
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