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A Mass Balance Approach for
Evaluating Leachable Arsenic and Chromium from an In-Service CCA-Treated
Wood Structure.
Shibata, T., Solo-Gabriele,
H., Fleming, L., Cai, Y., Townsend T.
Science of the Total Environment. 372(2-3):624-635.
doi:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2006.10.037
Abstract : Many
existing residential wood structures, such as playsets and
decks, have been treated with chromated copper arsenate (CCA).
This preservative chemical can be released from these structures
incrementally over time through contact with rainfall. The
objective of this study was to evaluate the levels of arsenic
and chromium leached from an in-service CCA-treated deck exposed
to rainfall, as well as their possible impacts on soils and
shallow groundwater. Two monitoring stations, one containing a
CCA-treated deck and the other containing an untreated deck as a
control, were constructed outside for this study. Rainfall,
runoff water from the decks, soils below the decks, and
infiltrated water through 0.7-m depth of soil were monitored for
arsenic and chromium over a period of 3 years. The
concentration of the CCA-treated deck runoff for arsenic
(0.114–4.66 mg/L) and chromium (0.008–0.470 mg/L)
were significantly (p < 0.001) higher than
the untreated deck runoff (≤ 0.002 mg/L for
both). During the 3-year monitoring period, 13% of the arsenic
and 1.4% of the chromium were leached from the amount initially
present in the CCA-treated wood. Arsenic levels (< 0.1–46 mg/kg)
in soils under the CCA-treated deck were significantly (p < 0.001)
higher than under the untreated deck (< 0.1–2.7 mg/kg),
while chromium levels were statistically the same below the two
decks (2.4–9.6 mg/kg). Approximately 94% of the arsenic
from the runoff was absorbed in the soils below the CCA-treated
deck; the upper 2.5 cm of the soils captured 42% of the total.
The infiltrated water concentrations for arsenic (< 0.001–0.085 mg/L)
and chromium (< 0.001–0.010 mg/L) below the CCA-treated
deck were both significantly (p < 0.001)
higher than below the untreated deck (≤ 0.006 mg/L).
The amounts of arsenic found in the infiltrated water below the
CCA-treated deck represented 6% of total arsenic leached and
less than 0.7% of the initial mass in the wood. The study
demonstrated that exposure of a CCA-treated deck to rainfall
resulted in elevated arsenic concentrations in both runoff and
soil. Although only a relatively small fraction of the initial
arsenic from the wood was found to infiltrate through the soil,
these impacts were significant and caused the infiltrated water
to exceed drinking water standards. The study suggests that
potential exposures to arsenic exist indirectly through an
environment that is contaminated with arsenic leached from
in-service CCA-treated wood. Keywords: Arsenic, Chromium, Leachable Arsenic; In-service CCA-treated Wood; Runoff; Soil; Infiltrated Water; Potential Exposure.
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