4 research outputs found
Temporal Variability of Indoor Air Concentrations under Natural Conditions in a House Overlying a Dilute Chlorinated Solvent Groundwater Plume
Current
vapor intrusion (VI) pathway assessment heavily weights
concentrations from infrequent (monthly–seasonal) 24 h indoor
air samples. This study collected a long-term and high-frequency data
set that can be used to assess indoor air sampling strategies for
answering key pathway assessment questions like: “Is VI occurring?”,
and “Will VI impacts exceed thresholds of concern?”.
Indoor air sampling was conducted for 2.5 years at 2–4 h intervals
in a house overlying a dilute chlorinated solvent plume (10–50
ÎĽg/L TCE). Indoor air concentrations varied by 3 orders of magnitude
(<0.01–10 ppb<sub>v</sub> TCE) with two recurring behaviors.
The VI-active behavior, which was prevalent in fall, winter, and spring
involved time-varying impacts intermixed with sporadic periods of
inactivity; the VI-dormant behavior, which was prevalent in the summer,
involved long periods of inactivity with sporadic VI impacts. These
data were used to study outcomes of three simple sparse data sampling
plans; the probabilities of false-negative and false-positive decisions
were dependent on the ratio of the (action level/true mean of the
data), the number of exceedances needed, and the sampling strategy.
The analysis also suggested a significant potential for poor characterization
of long-term mean concentrations with sparse sampling plans. The results
point to a need for additional dense data sets and further investigation
into the robustness of possible VI assessment paradigms. As this is
the first data set of its kind, it is unknown if the results are representative
of other VI-sites
Identification of Alternative Vapor Intrusion Pathways Using Controlled Pressure Testing, Soil Gas Monitoring, and Screening Model Calculations
Vapor
intrusion (VI) pathway assessment and data interpretation
have been guided by an historical conceptual model in which vapors
originating from contaminated soil or groundwater diffuse upward through
soil and are swept into a building by soil gas flow induced by building
underpressurization. Recent studies reveal that alternative VI pathways
involving neighborhood sewers, land drains, and other major underground
piping can also be significant VI contributors, even to buildings
beyond the delineated footprint of soil and groundwater contamination.
This work illustrates how controlled-pressure-method testing (CPM),
soil gas sampling, and screening-level emissions calculations can
be used to identify significant alternative VI pathways that might
go undetected by conventional sampling under natural conditions at
some sites. The combined utility of these tools is shown through data
collected at a long-term study house, where a significant alternative
VI pathway was discovered and altered so that it could be manipulated
to be on or off. Data collected during periods of natural and CPM
conditions show that the alternative pathway was significant, but
its presence was not identifiable under natural conditions; it was
identified under CPM conditions when measured emission rates were
2 orders of magnitude greater than screening-model estimates and subfoundation
vertical soil gas profiles changed and were no longer consistent with
the conventional VI conceptual model
Long-Term Evaluation of the Controlled Pressure Method for Assessment of the Vapor Intrusion Pathway
Vapor intrusion (VI)
investigations often require sampling of indoor
air for evaluating occupant risks, but can be confounded by temporal
variability and the presence of indoor sources. Controlled pressure
methods (CPM) have been proposed as an alternative, but temporal variability
of CPM results and whether they are indicative of impacts under natural
conditions have not been rigorously investigated. This study is the
first involving a long-term CPM test at a house having a multiyear
high temporal resolution indoor air data set under natural conditions.
Key observations include (a) CPM results exhibited low temporal variability,
(b) false-negative results were not obtained, (c) the indoor air concentrations
were similar to the maximum concentrations under natural conditions,
and (d) results exceeded long-term average concentrations and emission
rates under natural conditions by 1–2 orders of magnitude.
Thus, the CPM results were a reliable indicator of VI occurrence and
worst-case exposure regardless of day or time of year of the CPM test
Evaluation of Vapor Intrusion Using Controlled Building Pressure
The use of measured volatile organic chemical (VOC) concentrations
in indoor air to evaluate vapor intrusion is complicated by (i) indoor
sources of the same VOCs and (ii) temporal variability in vapor intrusion.
This study evaluated the efficacy of utilizing induced negative and
positive building pressure conditions during a vapor intrusion investigation
program to provide an improved understanding of the potential for
vapor intrusion. Pressure control was achieved in five of six buildings
where the investigation program was tested. For these five buildings,
the induced pressure differences were sufficient to control the flow
of soil gas through the building foundation. A comparison of VOC concentrations
in indoor air measured during the negative and positive pressure test
conditions was sufficient to determine whether vapor intrusion was
the primary source of VOCs in indoor air at these buildings. The study
results indicate that sampling under controlled building pressure
can help minimize ambiguity caused by both indoor sources of VOCs
and temporal variability in vapor intrusion