A first french assessment of population exposure to tetrachloroethylene from small dry cleaning facilities

13 November 2019

Chiappini, L., Delery, L., Leoz-Garziandia, E., Brouard, B., Fagault, F.

Indoor Air, Wiley, 2009, 19(3), 226-233.

Used as a solvent in the dry-cleaning industry, tetrachloroethylene (C2Cl4) can be a pollutant of residential indoor air, which can cause long-term harmful exposures because of its neurotoxicity and probable carcinogenicity. In France, dry-cleaning facilities are integrated in urban environments (shopping malls, residential buildings) and can contribute to C2Cl4 exposure for customers and residents. This exploratory work presents the results from five studies carried out in one shopping mall and four residential buildings housing a dry-cleaning facility. These studies involved dry-cleaning machines fitted with a Carbon Adsorber and unfitted, with or without Air Exhaust System. Samples were collected in the cleaning facilities and in the apartments located above with passive samplers allowing measurement of time-integrated concentrations on a 7 days sampling period. It has obviously shown the degradation of indoor air quality in these environments and underlined the contributing role of the machine technology and ventilation system on the amount of released C2Cl4 in the indoor air. To temper these results, it must be pointed out that some parameters (building insulation, amount of solvent used…) which would influence C2Cl4 fugitive release have not been quantified and should be looked at in further studies.