Soil-Gas Contamination and Entry of Volatile Organic Compounds into a House Near a Landfill

Toxic volatile organic compounds (VOC) are commonly found in landfills, including those accepting only municipal waste. These VOC can migrate away from the site through the soil and result in contaminated off-site soil gas. This contaminated soil gas can enter houses built near landfills and is a potential source of human exposure to VOC. This study investigated soil-gas contamination and the mechanisms of entry of VOC into a house with a basement sited adjacent to a municipal landfill. The VOC were identified and quantified in the soil gas and in indoor and outdoor air. Pressure coupling between the basement and the surrounding soil was measured. Using soil-gas tracers, the pressure-driven advective entry of soil gas was quantified as a function of basement depressurization. From the measurements, estimates were made for the diffusive and advective entry rates of VOC into the house. A comparison of the chlorinated hydrocarbons found in soil gas at the site and in the landfill suggests that the landfill i...

[1]  W J Fisk,et al.  Evaluation of radon mitigation systems in 14 houses over a two-year period. , 1990, Journal of the Air & Waste Management Association.

[2]  Application of a Multisorbent Sampling Technique for Investigations of Volatile Organic Compounds in Buildings , 1989 .

[3]  W. Nazaroff,et al.  Experiments on pollutant transport from soil into residential basements by pressure-driven airflow. , 1987, Environmental science & technology.

[4]  Richard G. Sextro,et al.  Modeling and field evidence of pressure-driven entry of soil gas into a house through permeable below-grade walls , 1989 .

[5]  David T. Grimsrud,et al.  Measurement of infiltration using fan pressurization and weather data , 1980 .

[6]  R. Sextro,et al.  Characterizing the occurrence, sources, and variability of radon in Pacific Northwest homes. , 1990, Journal of the Air & Waste Management Association.

[7]  W. Nazaroff,et al.  Characterising the Source of Radon Indoors , 1983 .

[8]  Paul C. Johnson,et al.  Heuristic model for predicting the intrusion rate of contaminant vapors into buildings , 1991 .

[9]  F. Höffken [Institute for Water-Soil and Air Hygiene]. , 1972, Fortschritte der Medizin.

[10]  W J Fisk,et al.  Modeling the effects of exhaust ventilation on 222Rn entry rates and indoor 222Rn concentrations. , 1988, Health physics.

[11]  J. Wood,et al.  Hazardous pollutants in class II landfills. , 1987, JAPCA.

[12]  R. Sextro,et al.  Investigations of Soil as a Source of Indoor Radon , 1987 .

[13]  J. Shah,et al.  Distribution of volatile organic chemicals in outdoor and indoor air: a national VOCs data base. , 1988, Environmental science & technology.

[14]  R. Toohey,et al.  Radon transport into a detached one-story house with a basement , 1985 .