Kerger B D, Schmidt C E, Paustenbach D J
Health Science Resource Integration, Inc., Tallahassee, FL 32308, USA.
Risk Anal. 2000 Oct;20(5):637-51. doi: 10.1111/0272-4332.205058.
This study evaluates airborne concentrations of common trihalomethane (THM) compounds in bathrooms during showering and bathing in homes supplied with chlorinated tap water. Three homes in an urban area were selected, each having three bedrooms, a full bath, and approximately 1,000 square feet of living area. THMs were concurrently measured in tap water and air in the shower/bath enclosure and the bathroom vanity area using Summa canisters. Chloroform (TCM), bromodichloromethane (BDCM), and chlorodibromomethane (CDBM) were quantified using U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Method TO-14. Air samples were collected prior to, during, and after the water-use event for 16 shower and 7 bath events. Flow rate and temperature were measured, but not controlled. The increase in average airborne concentration (+/- standard error) during showers (expressed as microg/m3 in shower enclosure or bathroom air per microg/L in water) was 3.3+/-0.4 for TCM, 1.8+/-0.3 for BDCM, and 0.5+/-0.1 for CDBM (n = 12), and during baths was 1.2+/-0.4 for TCM, 0.59+/-0.21 for BDCM, and 0.15+/-0.05 for CDBM (n = 4). The relative contribution of each chemical to the airborne concentrations was consistent for all shower and bath events, with apparent release of TCM > BDCM > CDBM. The results are therefore consistent with their relative concentration in tap water and their vapor pressures. When the shower findings for TCM are normalized for water concentration, flow rate, shower volume, and duration, the average exposure concentrations in these urban residences are about 30% lower than those reported by other investigators using EPA analytical methods. This difference is likely attributable primarily to greater air exchange rates in residential shower/bath stalls compared to more "airtight" laboratory shower chambers. This appears to be the first field study to thoroughly evaluate THM exposures from residential showers and baths, and can be used to validate previously published models of tap water volatile chemical transfer to indoor air.
本研究评估了在供应加氯自来水的家庭中,淋浴和盆浴期间浴室里常见三卤甲烷(THM)化合物的空气传播浓度。在市区选择了三户家庭,每户有三间卧室、一个全卫和大约1000平方英尺的居住面积。使用苏玛罐同时测量淋浴/盆浴间和浴室洗手台区域的自来水和空气中的三卤甲烷。采用美国环境保护局(EPA)方法TO - 14对氯仿(TCM)、溴二氯甲烷(BDCM)和氯二溴甲烷(CDBM)进行定量分析。在用水事件之前、期间和之后采集空气样本,共进行了16次淋浴和7次盆浴事件。测量了流速和温度,但未进行控制。淋浴期间空气中平均浓度的增加(±标准误差)(以每升水中微克数对应的淋浴间或浴室空气中微克/立方米表示),TCM为3.3±0.4,BDCM为1.8±0.3,CDBM为0.5±0.1(n = 12);盆浴期间,TCM为1.2±0.4,BDCM为0.59±0.21,CDBM为0.15±0.05(n = 4)。在所有淋浴和盆浴事件中,每种化学物质对空气中浓度的相对贡献是一致的,TCM的明显释放量>BDCM>CDBM。因此,结果与它们在自来水中的相对浓度及其蒸气压一致。当将TCM的淋浴结果按照水浓度、流速、淋浴水量和持续时间进行归一化处理后,这些城市住宅中的平均暴露浓度比其他使用EPA分析方法的研究者报告的浓度低约30%。这种差异可能主要归因于住宅淋浴/盆浴间的空气交换率高于更“密封”的实验室淋浴间。这似乎是第一项全面评估住宅淋浴和盆浴中THM暴露情况的现场研究,可用于验证先前发表的自来水挥发性化学物质向室内空气转移的模型。