Off-gassing from firefighter suits (nomex) as an indoor source of BTEXS

Chemosphere. 2024 Feb:350:140996. doi: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2023.140996. Epub 2023 Dec 21.

Abstract

The clothes and special equipment of firefighters can be a source of indoor air pollution. Nevertheless, it has not been investigated so far what the scale of the release of various compounds from such materials into the indoor air can be. The following study analysed the results of an experiment involving the passive measurement of concentrations of selected compounds, i.a. benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, m,p-xylene, o-xylene, styrene, isopropylbenzene and n-propylbenzene (BTEXS) in the air of a room where firefighters' special clothing, which had been previously exposed to emissions from simulated fires, was stored. The study included simulations of fires involving three materials: wood, processed wood (OSB/fibreboard) and a mixture of plastics. After being exposed to the simulated fire environment, special clothing (so-called nomex) was placed in a sealed chamber, where passive collection of BTEXS was carried out using tube-type axial passive samplers and a gas chromatograph. Irrespective of which burned material special clothing was exposed to, the compound emitted into the air most intensively was toluene. Its rate of release from a single nomex ranges from 4.4 to 28.6 μg h-1, while the corresponding rates for the sum of BTEXS are between 9.97 and 44.29 μg h-1.

Keywords: Fire smoke; Firehouse; IAQ; Indoor air; PPE; Pollution accumulation.

MeSH terms

  • Air Pollution, Indoor* / analysis
  • Benzene / analysis
  • Firefighters*
  • Gases / analysis
  • Humans
  • Toluene / analysis

Substances

  • Toluene
  • Benzene
  • Gases