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Polychlorinated naphthalenes and co-planar PCBs in arctic air.

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Polychlorinated naphthalenes and co-planar PCBs in arctic air. / Harner, Tom; Kylin, Henrik; Bidleman, Terry F. et al.
In: Environmental Science and Technology, Vol. 32, No. 21, 01.11.1998, p. 3257-3265.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Harner, T, Kylin, H, Bidleman, TF, Halsall, CJ, Strachan, WM, Barrie, L & Fellin, P 1998, 'Polychlorinated naphthalenes and co-planar PCBs in arctic air.', Environmental Science and Technology, vol. 32, no. 21, pp. 3257-3265. https://doi.org/10.1021/es9803106

APA

Harner, T., Kylin, H., Bidleman, T. F., Halsall, C. J., Strachan, W. M., Barrie, L., & Fellin, P. (1998). Polychlorinated naphthalenes and co-planar PCBs in arctic air. Environmental Science and Technology, 32(21), 3257-3265. https://doi.org/10.1021/es9803106

Vancouver

Harner T, Kylin H, Bidleman TF, Halsall CJ, Strachan WM, Barrie L et al. Polychlorinated naphthalenes and co-planar PCBs in arctic air. Environmental Science and Technology. 1998 Nov 1;32(21):3257-3265. doi: 10.1021/es9803106

Author

Harner, Tom ; Kylin, Henrik ; Bidleman, Terry F. et al. / Polychlorinated naphthalenes and co-planar PCBs in arctic air. In: Environmental Science and Technology. 1998 ; Vol. 32, No. 21. pp. 3257-3265.

Bibtex

@article{f451684c321245cab72bc07c3cc0fca1,
title = "Polychlorinated naphthalenes and co-planar PCBs in arctic air.",
abstract = "Concentrations of polychlorinated naphthalenes (PCNs) are reported for the first time in arctic air. The data represent combined air samples from the Barents Sea (n = 2), eastern Arctic Ocean (n = 10), Norwegian Sea (n = 2), and two land-based monitoring stations at Alert, Canada (n = 5), and Dunai Island in eastern Siberia, Russia (n = 3). Values for ∑PCN (pg m-3) were 6−49 for shipboard samples and 0.3−8 for land-based stations and were dominated by the 3-Cl and 4-Cl homologues, which accounted for 90−95% of the total mass. Average values for ∑PCB (pg m-3) for the shipboard samples were 126, 24, and 75 for the Barents Sea, eastern Arctic, and Norwegian Sea, respectively. Three-dimensional 5-day air parcel back-trajectories arriving at the ship at 850 and 925 hPa suggested that elevated PCB and PCN concentrations for shipboard samples originated in Europe. Concentrations (fg m-3) of coplanar PCBs in artic air were 3−40 (PCB 77) and 0.3−8 (PCB 126)about an order of magnitude lower than in urban air. Higher concentrations of PCB 77 and PCB 126, 347 and 5.0 (fg m-3), respectively, were found in the Barents Sea for two samples with elevated ∑PCBs. The proportion of coplanar PCBs to ∑PCBs was within the range of values reported for Aroclor and Clophen mixtures. The 2,3,7,8-TCDD toxicity of the air samples was assessed in terms of the TEQ (dioxin toxic equivalents) contribution of mono-ortho PCBs (congeners 105, 114, 118, 156), non-ortho (coplanar) PCBs (congeners 77 and 126), and dioxin-like PCNs for which toxic equivalent factors have been determined. The results show a 13−67% TEQ contribution of PCNs in arctic air, and it is concluded that further investigation of this compound class is merited.",
author = "Tom Harner and Henrik Kylin and Bidleman, {Terry F.} and Halsall, {Crispin J.} and Strachan, {William M.} and Leonard Barrie and Phil Fellin",
year = "1998",
month = nov,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1021/es9803106",
language = "English",
volume = "32",
pages = "3257--3265",
journal = "Environmental Science and Technology",
issn = "0013-936X",
publisher = "American Chemical Society",
number = "21",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Polychlorinated naphthalenes and co-planar PCBs in arctic air.

AU - Harner, Tom

AU - Kylin, Henrik

AU - Bidleman, Terry F.

AU - Halsall, Crispin J.

AU - Strachan, William M.

AU - Barrie, Leonard

AU - Fellin, Phil

PY - 1998/11/1

Y1 - 1998/11/1

N2 - Concentrations of polychlorinated naphthalenes (PCNs) are reported for the first time in arctic air. The data represent combined air samples from the Barents Sea (n = 2), eastern Arctic Ocean (n = 10), Norwegian Sea (n = 2), and two land-based monitoring stations at Alert, Canada (n = 5), and Dunai Island in eastern Siberia, Russia (n = 3). Values for ∑PCN (pg m-3) were 6−49 for shipboard samples and 0.3−8 for land-based stations and were dominated by the 3-Cl and 4-Cl homologues, which accounted for 90−95% of the total mass. Average values for ∑PCB (pg m-3) for the shipboard samples were 126, 24, and 75 for the Barents Sea, eastern Arctic, and Norwegian Sea, respectively. Three-dimensional 5-day air parcel back-trajectories arriving at the ship at 850 and 925 hPa suggested that elevated PCB and PCN concentrations for shipboard samples originated in Europe. Concentrations (fg m-3) of coplanar PCBs in artic air were 3−40 (PCB 77) and 0.3−8 (PCB 126)about an order of magnitude lower than in urban air. Higher concentrations of PCB 77 and PCB 126, 347 and 5.0 (fg m-3), respectively, were found in the Barents Sea for two samples with elevated ∑PCBs. The proportion of coplanar PCBs to ∑PCBs was within the range of values reported for Aroclor and Clophen mixtures. The 2,3,7,8-TCDD toxicity of the air samples was assessed in terms of the TEQ (dioxin toxic equivalents) contribution of mono-ortho PCBs (congeners 105, 114, 118, 156), non-ortho (coplanar) PCBs (congeners 77 and 126), and dioxin-like PCNs for which toxic equivalent factors have been determined. The results show a 13−67% TEQ contribution of PCNs in arctic air, and it is concluded that further investigation of this compound class is merited.

AB - Concentrations of polychlorinated naphthalenes (PCNs) are reported for the first time in arctic air. The data represent combined air samples from the Barents Sea (n = 2), eastern Arctic Ocean (n = 10), Norwegian Sea (n = 2), and two land-based monitoring stations at Alert, Canada (n = 5), and Dunai Island in eastern Siberia, Russia (n = 3). Values for ∑PCN (pg m-3) were 6−49 for shipboard samples and 0.3−8 for land-based stations and were dominated by the 3-Cl and 4-Cl homologues, which accounted for 90−95% of the total mass. Average values for ∑PCB (pg m-3) for the shipboard samples were 126, 24, and 75 for the Barents Sea, eastern Arctic, and Norwegian Sea, respectively. Three-dimensional 5-day air parcel back-trajectories arriving at the ship at 850 and 925 hPa suggested that elevated PCB and PCN concentrations for shipboard samples originated in Europe. Concentrations (fg m-3) of coplanar PCBs in artic air were 3−40 (PCB 77) and 0.3−8 (PCB 126)about an order of magnitude lower than in urban air. Higher concentrations of PCB 77 and PCB 126, 347 and 5.0 (fg m-3), respectively, were found in the Barents Sea for two samples with elevated ∑PCBs. The proportion of coplanar PCBs to ∑PCBs was within the range of values reported for Aroclor and Clophen mixtures. The 2,3,7,8-TCDD toxicity of the air samples was assessed in terms of the TEQ (dioxin toxic equivalents) contribution of mono-ortho PCBs (congeners 105, 114, 118, 156), non-ortho (coplanar) PCBs (congeners 77 and 126), and dioxin-like PCNs for which toxic equivalent factors have been determined. The results show a 13−67% TEQ contribution of PCNs in arctic air, and it is concluded that further investigation of this compound class is merited.

U2 - 10.1021/es9803106

DO - 10.1021/es9803106

M3 - Journal article

VL - 32

SP - 3257

EP - 3265

JO - Environmental Science and Technology

JF - Environmental Science and Technology

SN - 0013-936X

IS - 21

ER -