Are We Justified in Modeling Human Exposure to Chlorinated Paraffin Mixtures Using the Average Properties of Congeners and Homologues?

Environ Sci Technol

Department of Physical and Environmental Sciences, University of Toronto Scarborough, 1265 Military Trail, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M1C 1A4.

Published: March 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • There's growing concern about human exposure to chlorinated paraffin (CP) mixtures, but understanding how exposure varies based on the chemical properties of these mixtures has been challenging.* -
  • The study compares two methods for predicting human exposure: a complex isomer-specific approach and a simplified one that uses average properties of different CP groups, finding significant variability in potential exposure.* -
  • CPs with 13-19 carbons and 6-10 chlorines pose the highest risk due to their chemical traits, and using average properties may provide a practical and useful way to assess risk in future studies.*

Article Abstract

Concern over human exposure to chlorinated paraffin (CP) mixtures keeps increasing. The absence of a comprehensive understanding of how human exposure varies with the physicochemical properties of CP constituents has hindered the ability to determine at what level of aggregation exposure to CPs should be assessed. We answer this question by comparing exposure predicted with either a "complex" method that utilizes isomer-specific properties or "simplified" methods that rely on median properties of congener, homologue, or short-/medium-/long-chain CP groups. Our results demonstrate the wide range of physicochemical properties across CP mixtures and their dependence on molecular structures. Assuming unit emissions in the environment, these variances translate into an extensive disparity in whole-body concentrations predicted for different isomers, spanning ∼11 orders of magnitude. CPs with 13-19 carbons and 6-10 chlorines exhibit the highest human exposure potential, primarily owing to moderate to high hydrophobicity and slow environmental degradation and biotransformation. Far-field exposure is dominant for most CP constituents. Our study underscores that using average properties of congener, homologue, or S/M/LCCP groups yields results that are consistent with those derived from isomer-based modeling, thus offering an efficient and practical framework for future risk assessments and human exposure studies of CPs and other complex chemical mixtures.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.3c09186DOI Listing

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