1 research outputs found
PM<sub>2.5</sub>-Bound Organophosphate Flame Retardants in Hong Kong: Occurrence, Origins, and Source-Specific Health Risks
Organophosphate
flame retardants (OPFRs) are emerging organic pollutants
in PM2.5, which have caused significant public health concerns
in recent years, given their potential carcinogenic and neurotoxic
effects. However, studies on the sources, occurrence, and health risk
assessment of PM2.5-bound OPFRs in Hong Kong are lacking.
To address this knowledge gap, we characterized 13 OPFRs in one-year
PM2.5 samples using gas chromatography–atmospheric
pressure chemical ionization tandem mass spectrometry. Our findings
showed that OPFRs were present at a median concentration of 4978 pg
m–3 (ranging from 1924 to 8481 pg m–3), with chlorinated OPFRs dominating and accounting for 82.7% of
the total OPFRs. Using characteristic source markers and positive
matrix factorization, we identified one secondary formation and five
primary sources of OPFRs. Over 94.0% of PM2.5-bound OPFRs
in Hong Kong were primarily emitted, with plastic processing and waste
disposal being the leading source (61.0%), followed by marine vessels
(14.1%). The contributions of these two sources to OPFRs were more
pronounced on days influenced by local pollution emissions (91.9%)
than on days affected by regional pollution (44.2%). Our assessment
of health risks associated with human exposure to PM2.5-bound OPFRs indicated a low-risk level. However, further source-specific
health risk assessment revealed relatively high noncarcinogenic and
carcinogenic risks from chlorinated OPFRs emitted from plastic processing
and waste disposal, suggesting a need for more stringent emission
control of OPFRs from these sources in Hong Kong
