Title of article
An evaluation of chemical persistence screening approaches
Author/Authors
David W Pennington، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
Pages
13
From page
1589
To page
1601
Abstract
A chemicalʹs ability to persist in the environment is an important criterion in determining whether concern is warranted. Screening is commonly conducted based on the maximum degradation half-life of the chemical in any given medium (air, water, soil and sediment), or in terms of model-based estimates of the chemicalʹs overall persistence (half-life or residence time) in the environment. In practice, however, both approaches are hindered by the limited availability of degradation data. Straightforward guidelines are therefore proposed in this paper to help predetermine which half-lives are likely to be pertinent, irrespective of the screening approach adopted. The guidelines are based on partitioning coefficients (Henryʹs Law constant and the octanol–water partitioning coefficient). The values selected for use in the guidelines result in a quantifiable trade-off between data acquisition requirements and uncertainty. Initial screening can be performed with whatever data is readily available. Overall persistence predictions will be conservative. False-negatives are not generated. The guideline values can then be adjusted iteratively to facilitate step-wise or tiered screening. Using this iterative approach in national and international screening initiatives will result in significant time and money savings.
Keywords
Chemical screening , Overall persistence , Persistent organic pollutants , POPs , PBTs , Uncertainty
Journal title
Chemosphere
Serial Year
2001
Journal title
Chemosphere
Record number
735718
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