Science Inventory

Development Of An Air-To-Leaf Vapor Phase Transfer Factor For Dioxins And Furans

Citation:

Lorber, M. Development Of An Air-To-Leaf Vapor Phase Transfer Factor For Dioxins And Furans. Organohalogen Compounds 24:179-186, (1995).

Description:

Results of an experiment in which grass was grown in a greenhouse and outdoors, and in soils of different concentration levels of dioxins and furans, were used in a modeling exercise to derive an air-to-leaf vapor phase transfer factor. The purpose of the experiment was to understand the pathways by which dioxins and furans enter the grass. A principal finding in the experiment was that dry gaseous deposition of these compounds, rather than particle deposition or soil-to-plant transfers, explained the concentrations found. A subset of the data from this experiment was used in a modeling framework in this paper. Specifically, the subset includes ambient air concentrations from the summer sampling for 1991 and the outdoor grass concentrations during the same period. The air-to-plant modeling framework is a simple empirical framework. Air-borne dioxin congeners are partitioned into a particle and a vapor phase. The particle phase dioxins settle onto plants and are weathered (washed off or blown off) from the plants using a simple first order weathering constant. Vapor phase dioxins "transfer" to plants using a simple air-to-leaf biotransfer factor. The experimental data was used to determine the air-to-leaf vapor phase biotransfer factor of this modeling framework.

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( JOURNAL/ PEER REVIEWED JOURNAL)
Product Published Date:10/08/2002
Record Last Revised:01/03/2006
Record ID: 54828