Research: Flame Retardants, Dioxins, and Furans in Air and On Firefighters’ Protective Ensembles During Controlled Residential Firefighting

Elsevier, Environment International Volume 140, July 2020, 105756
Shared under Common Creative license

Kenneth W.Fent, Mark LaGuardia, Drew Luellen, Seth McCormick, Alexander Mayer, I-Chen Chen, Steve Kerber, Denise Smith, Gavin P.Horn

Introduction

Structure fires that involve modern furnishings may emit brominated flame retardants (BFRs) and organophosphate flame retardants (OPFRs), as well as brominated and chlorinated dioxins and furans, into the environment.
Objectives

The goal of this study was to quantify the airborne and personal protective equipment (PPE) contamination levels of these compounds during controlled residential fires in the U.S., and to evaluate gross-decontamination measures.

Methods

Bulk-sampling was done to confirm the presence of flame retardants (FRs) in the furnishings used in 12 controlled residential structure fires. Area air samples were collected during the fires and PPE wipe samples were collected from the firefighters’ turnout jackets and gloves after firefighting. For each fire, half of the jackets were decontaminated and the other half were not.

Results

Of the BFRs and OPFRs measured in air during the fire period, decabromodiphenyl ether (BDE-209) and triphenyl phosphate (TPP) were the most abundant, with medians of 15.6 and 408 µg/m3, respectively, and were also detected during overhaul. These and several other BFRs and OPFRs were measured on PPE. Some gloves had contaminant levels exceeding 100 ng/cm2 and were generally more contaminated than jackets. Air and surface levels of the brominated furans appeared to be higher than the chlorinated dioxins and furans. Routine gross decontamination appeared to reduce many of the BFR contaminants, but results for the OPFRs were mixed.
Conclusions

Structure fires are likely to result in a variety of FRs, dioxins, and furans into the environment, leading to PPE contamination for those working on the fireground. Firefighters should wear self-contained breathing apparatus during all phases of the response and launder or decontaminate their PPE (including gloves) after fire events.

Read the Full Report

Study design and air and bulk sampling strategy.

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