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Inadvertent polychlorinated biphenyls in commercial paint pigments
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Inadvertent polychlorinated biphenyls in commercial paint pigments

Dingfei Hu and Keri C. Hornbuckle
Environmental science & technology, Vol.44(8), pp.2822-2827
2010
DOI: 10.1021/es902413k
PMCID: PMC2853905
PMID: 19957996
url
https://doi.org/10.1021/es902413kView
Published (Version of record) Open Access

Abstract

A polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) that was not produced as part of the Aroclor mixtures banned in the 1980s was recently reported in air samples collected in Chicago, Philadelphia, the Arctic, and several sites around the Great Lakes. In Chicago, the congener 3,3-dichlorobiphenyl or PCB11 was found to be the fifth most concentrated congener and ubiquitous throughout the city. The congener exhibited strong seasonal concentration trends that suggest volatilization of this compound from common outdoor surfaces. Due to these findings and also the compound's presence in waters that received waste from paint manufacturing facilities, we hypothesized that PCB11 may be present in current commercial paint. In this study we measured PCBs in paint sold on the current retail market. We tested 33 commercial paint pigments purchased from three local paint stores. The pigment samples were analyzed for all 209 PCB congeners using gas chromatography with tandem mass spectrometry (GC-MS/MS). More than 50 PCB congeners including several dioxin-like PCBs were detected, and the PCB profiles varied due to different types of pigments and different manufacturing processes. PCB congeners were detected in azo and phthalocyanine pigments which are commonly used in paint but also in inks, textiles, paper, cosmetics, leather, plastics, food and other materials. Our findings suggest several possible mechanisms for the inadvertent production of specific PCB congeners during the manufacturing of paint pigments. 2009 American Chemical Society.

Civil and Environmental Engineering

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