Chlorinated paraffins (CPs) are used in many products,
including
soft poly(vinyl chloride) curtains, which are used in many indoor
environments. Health hazards posed by CPs in curtains are poorly understood.
Here, chamber tests and an indoor fugacity model were used to predict
CP emissions from soft poly(vinyl chloride) curtains, and dermal uptake
through direct contact was assessed using surface wipes. Short-chain
and medium-chain CPs accounted for 30% by weight of the curtains.
Evaporation drives CP migration, like for other semivolatile organic
plasticizers, at room temperature. The CP emission rate to air was
7.09 ng/(cm2 h), and the estimated short-chain and medium-chain
CP concentrations were 583 and 95.3 ng/m3 in indoor air
21.2 and 172 μg/g in dust, respectively. Curtains could be important
indoor sources of CPs to dust and air. The calculated total daily
CP intakes from air and dust were 165 ng/(kg day) for an adult and
514 ng/(kg day) for a toddler, and an assessment of dermal intake
through direct contact indicated that touching just once could increase
intake by 274 μg. The results indicated that curtains, which
are common in houses, could pose considerable health risks through
inhalation of and dermal contact with CPs.
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