posted on 2015-12-17, 01:02authored bySteven
G. O’Connell, Laurel
D. Kincl, Kim A. Anderson
Active-sampling
approaches are commonly used for personal monitoring,
but are limited by energy usage and data that may not represent an
individual’s exposure or bioavailable concentrations. Current
passive techniques often involve extensive preparation, or are developed
for only a small number of targeted compounds. In this work, we present
a novel application for measuring bioavailable exposure with silicone
wristbands as personal passive samplers. Laboratory methodology affecting
precleaning, infusion, and extraction were developed from commercially
available silicone, and chromatographic background interference was
reduced after solvent cleanup with good extraction efficiency (>96%).
After finalizing laboratory methods, 49 compounds were sequestered
during an ambient deployment which encompassed a diverse set of compounds
including polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), consumer products,
personal care products, pesticides, phthalates, and other industrial
compounds ranging in log Kow from −0.07
(caffeine) to 9.49 (tris(2-ethylhexyl) phosphate). In two hot asphalt
occupational settings, silicone personal samplers sequestered 25 PAHs
during 8- and 40-h exposures, as well as 2 oxygenated-PAHs (benzofluorenone
and fluorenone) suggesting temporal sensitivity over a single work
day or week (p < 0.05, power =0.85). Additionally,
the amount of PAH sequestered differed between worksites (p < 0.05, power = 0.99), suggesting spatial sensitivity
using this novel application.