The direct measurement of volatile compounds is becoming increasingly important in assessing site contamination, particularly in relation to human health risk assessment and the design of remediation procedures. This study assesses the influence of direct measurements on the human health risk assessment conducted at a petroleum-contaminated site. Specifically, it provides contaminated-site risk managers with a quantitative comparison of the assessed risks by using measured and modeled data. A total of 16 monitoring campaigns were conducted at a Site of National Interest (SNI) located in Sicily (Italy), during which the hydrocarbon vapor concentrations in the subsurface soil porosity were measured using nested soil gas probes, while the related emitted fluxes were quantified with dynamic flux chambers. Measured data were compared with those obtained with a non-reactive diffusive model using the concentrations measured in the soil. The results highlighted significant overestimations of the expected outdoor concentrations obtained using non-reactive diffusive models by up to four orders of magnitude. These findings underscore the intrinsic limitation of non-reactive diffusive models, which provide overly conservative and unrealistic risk scenarios. Therefore, direct measurements might represent a cost-effective option to account for natural attenuation phenomena occurring in the subsurface, leading to a more realistic human health risk assessment (HHRA).

Di Trapani, D., Bifulco, S., Capodici, M., Cosenza, A., De Marines, F., Farina, M., et al. (2025). Direct measurements of petroleum hydrocarbon vapors in the risk assessment procedure: the case of a contaminated italian site. SUSTAINABILITY, 17(9) [10.3390/su17094189].

Direct measurements of petroleum hydrocarbon vapors in the risk assessment procedure: the case of a contaminated italian site

Verginelli, I;
2025-01-01

Abstract

The direct measurement of volatile compounds is becoming increasingly important in assessing site contamination, particularly in relation to human health risk assessment and the design of remediation procedures. This study assesses the influence of direct measurements on the human health risk assessment conducted at a petroleum-contaminated site. Specifically, it provides contaminated-site risk managers with a quantitative comparison of the assessed risks by using measured and modeled data. A total of 16 monitoring campaigns were conducted at a Site of National Interest (SNI) located in Sicily (Italy), during which the hydrocarbon vapor concentrations in the subsurface soil porosity were measured using nested soil gas probes, while the related emitted fluxes were quantified with dynamic flux chambers. Measured data were compared with those obtained with a non-reactive diffusive model using the concentrations measured in the soil. The results highlighted significant overestimations of the expected outdoor concentrations obtained using non-reactive diffusive models by up to four orders of magnitude. These findings underscore the intrinsic limitation of non-reactive diffusive models, which provide overly conservative and unrealistic risk scenarios. Therefore, direct measurements might represent a cost-effective option to account for natural attenuation phenomena occurring in the subsurface, leading to a more realistic human health risk assessment (HHRA).
2025
Pubblicato
Rilevanza internazionale
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Settore ICAR/03
Settore CEAR-02/A - Ingegneria sanitaria-ambientale
English
Con Impact Factor ISI
Dynamic flux chamber
Soil gas
Volatile organic compounds
Natural attenuation
Human health risk assessment
Di Trapani, D., Bifulco, S., Capodici, M., Cosenza, A., De Marines, F., Farina, M., et al. (2025). Direct measurements of petroleum hydrocarbon vapors in the risk assessment procedure: the case of a contaminated italian site. SUSTAINABILITY, 17(9) [10.3390/su17094189].
Di Trapani, D; Bifulco, S; Capodici, M; Cosenza, A; De Marines, F; Farina, M; Verginelli, I; Viviani, G
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2108/453629
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