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What’s the Problem: The Vapor Intrusion Issue Brownfields 2008 Heavy Starch: Cleaning the Dry Cleaners Detroit, MI May 5, 2008 Presented by: Henry Schuver, DrPH, US EPA – OSW* *A personal perspective, does not represent Agency positions See: http://iavi.rti.org
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Overview of the VI Pathway Chemicals with evidence of toxicity PCE, TCE, DCE, VC, … Carcinogenicity, developmental neuro- & immuno- … Evidence of migration to receptors Exposure point concen. > acceptable Inhalation is relatively unavoidable Uninvited guest
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Conceptual model of the vapor intrusion exposure pathway Dissolved contamination LTLT Diffusion Vadose zone Building zone of influence Wind effects Enclosed space Cracks Q soil Air streamlines Convection Top of capillary zone Water Table Stack effects Mixing in indoor air and inhalation Convection Diffusion Phase partitioning C gw to C soil gas Slide by M. Bolas, Ohio EPA, presented Jan. 2006 Vapor Source Term
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Migration Potential Vertical Depth Horizontal Distance Conductivity (gas) Geologic Factors Barriers (with lateral continuity) Preferential pathways Natural Anthropogenic Building Factors Design, construction, conditions Pressure differential (lower indoors = driving force)
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Storm Sewer Map DC/MD Dry Cleaner vapor plume mapped using TAGA unit. Plume follows (leaky) sewer line
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Assessment Challenges Indoor air samples confounded by: Background (unless real-time measurements) Indoor sources Outdoor sources External samples confounded by: Uncertainty (lack of knowledge) of migration Variability (now well documented) - multiple orders Space Time Data collection techniques vary Interpretation of data is immature field
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Background* Indoor Air Concentrations vs Indoor Air Concentrations at Vapor Intrusion Sites [*Residential] Presented by H. Dawson 3-14-08 see http//:iavi.rti.org
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The VI Assessment Trap Requires characterization of: 1 Source of vapors (x time) 2 Attenuation (x time) 3 Toxicity (x time, + interactions) No health benefits unless & until actions No reductions in liabilities until actions Decreasing probability of showing no problem
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3-D Modeling [& Exterior samples] by L. Abreu & P. Johnson, EST, 2005 In NY state 5 out of 11 sample pairs shows conc. > under slab than nearby soil-gas implants – Bill Wertz of NYS 2/7/06 e-mail w/ Westside soil gas vs subslab.xls [up to 30 x higher under slab] Not representative of the sub-slab Goal of soil-gas sampling is to represent the concentration under the slab. (Use SS alpha.) Soil-gas wells Note: SS can be 60% of source conc. (In Sandbox Geology) AF = 0.1 AF = 0.001 AF = 0.01 2002 Some of what we have learned since 2002 – effect of building
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Observations: Exterior Soil Gas vs. Subslab H. Dawson Presented by H. Dawson 3-14-08 see http//:iavi.rti.org
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Attenuation: Summary & Conclusions Data Set 2 Presented by H. Dawson 3-14-08 see http//:iavi.rti.org
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Groundwater-to-Indoor Air Attenuation Individual Site Box Whisker Plots Presented by H. Dawson 3-14-08 see http//:iavi.rti.org
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Subslab-to-Indoor Air Attenuation Individual Site Box Whisker Plots Presented by H. Dawson 3-14-08 see http//:iavi.rti.org
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A pivotal time for VI approaches Some observations by Paul Johnson: “conventional point sampling … not adequate” “We should … increase confidence and efficiency.” MLE = Multiple Lines of …?
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Spatial and temporal indoor radon variations (Alavanja, et al., 2000) “Substantial year-to-year variability in radon concentrations has been routinely observed in homes [Steck, 1992], making it clear that a radon measurement made at a single point in time, even if measurement continued for an entire year, can result in increased exposure misclassification.”
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http://www.brownfieldstsc.org/newPublications.cfm? tabS=2
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Three main Brownfields messages Early consideration of VI is good Pre-construction cost savings VI need not prevent re-development
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