Legacy and Emerging Plasticizers and Stabilizers in PVC Floorings: Impacts of an Industrial Transition and Recycling

23 June 2023, Version 2
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Hazardous chemicals in building and construction plastics can lead to significant indoor exposure, health risks, and contamination of recycled materials. We systematically sample new PVC floorings on the Swiss market (n=151). We conduct elemental analysis using XRF, targeted and sus-pect GC MS analysis of ortho phthalates and alternative plasticizers, and bioassay tests for cytotoxicity, oxidative stress, and endocrine, mutagenic, and genotoxic activities (for selected samples). Surprisingly, 16% of the samples contain regulated chemicals above 0.1 weight%, mainly lead and bis(2-ethylhexyl) phthalate (DEHP). Their presence is likely linked with the use of recycled PVC in new floorings, highlighting that uncontrolled recycling can delay the phase-out of hazardous chemicals. Furthermore, 29% of the samples contain ortho-phthalates besides DEHP (mainly diisononyl and diisodecyl phthalates, DiNP and DiDP) above 0.1 weight%, and 17% of the 85 tested samples cause certain adverse biological effects. Together, they make up an additional 35% of samples of potential concern. Moreover, both suspect screening and bioassay results indicate the presence of additional (potentially) hazardous substances, including emerging alternative plasticizers. Overall, our study highlights the urgent need for accelerating the phase-out of hazardous substances and enhancing transparency of chemical compositions in plastics to protect human and ecosystem health and enable the transition to a safe and sustainable circular economy.

Keywords

Building and Construction
Plastic additives
Chemicals of Concern
Circular Economy
Indoor Air Quality
Plasticizers
Phthalates
Recycling

Supplementary materials

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Supporting Information File 1 (SI1):
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Word/PDF file presenting details on methods, addi-tional results (concentration statistics, substance correlations, screening test quality), and additional discussions (exposure to plasticizers)
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Supporting Information File 2 (SI2):
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Excel file with large tables large tables of processed data. It contains the final analysis results for each sample (Sheet S1), further information on the analytical standards (Sheet S2) and outputs of the different analytical techniques (Sheets S3-S10)
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Supporting Information File 3 (SI3)
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Zip file containing the protocol used for ortho-phthalate quantitation.
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Supporting Information File 4 (SI4)
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Zip file containing Agilent method files for the GC-MS analyses.
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Supporting Information File 5 (SI5)
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Zip file containing python scripts for data analysis
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supporting Information File 6 (SI6)
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Zip file containing the raw data from all conducted ATR FTIR measurements, as csv and spa files for each spectrum
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Supplementary weblinks

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Comment number 1, Rainer Otter: Jul 26, 2023, 15:16

Dear authors, you posted your manuscript on this server as pre-peer reviewed version. The issue raised, i.e. legacy additives in recycled materials is an important one. However your manuscript could have profited from a scientifically robust peer-review. Please be informed that the 2 corresponding authors will receive detailed comments in order to support you as this manuscript needs some major clarifications.