| Literature DB >> 20884393 |
Gregory Van Ulirsch1, Kevin Gleason, Shawn Gerstenberger, Daphne B Moffett, Glenn Pulliam, Tariq Ahmed, Jerald Fagliano.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In 2007, a synthetic turf recreational field in Newark, New Jersey, was closed because lead was found in synthetic turf fibers and in surface dust at concentrations exceeding hazard criteria. Consequently, public health professionals across the country began testing synthetic turf to determine whether it represented a lead hazard. Currently, no standardized methods exist to test for lead in synthetic turf or to assess lead hazards.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20884393 PMCID: PMC2957910 DOI: 10.1289/ehp.1002239
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health Perspect ISSN: 0091-6765 Impact factor: 9.031
Total lead concentrations in turf fibers and in surface dust from tested synthetic surfaces: sampling period August 2007 through September 2008.
| Tested surface | Use | Fiber type | Year installed | Turf fiber | Lead dust loading | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Detected values | All data | |||||
| New Jersey | ||||||
| 1 | Recreational | Nylon | 1999 | 3,500 | 49 ( | 49 ( |
| 2 | Recreational | Nylon | 2003 | 3,400 | 65 | 45 |
| 3 | Recreational | Nylon | 1999 | 4,100 | 4,047 ( | 4,047 ( |
| 4 | Recreational | Polyethylene | 2003 | < 1.4 | NA | NA |
| 5 | Recreational | Polyethylene | 2003 | < 2.1 | NA | NA |
| 6 | Recreational | Polyethylene | 2007 | < 1.0 | NA | NA |
| 7 | Recreational | Polyethylene | 2006 | < 1.7 | NA | NA |
| 8 | Recreational | Polyethylene | 2005 | < 1.4 | NA | NA |
| 9 | Recreational | Polyethylene | 2007 | 1.4 | NA | NA |
| 10 | Recreational | Polyethylene | 2005 | 2.0 | NA | NA |
| 11 | Recreational | Polyethylene | 2006 | < 1.4 | NA | NA |
| 12 | Recreational | Polyethylene | 2007 | < 1.0 | NA | NA |
| 13 | Recreational | Polyethylene | 2003 | 1.6 | NA | NA |
| New York | ||||||
| 14 | Recreational | Nylon (yellow) | 1999 | 4,500 | NA | NA |
| 14 | Recreational | Nylon | 1999 | 4,900 | NA | NA |
| 14 | Recreational | Nylon (white) | 1999 | 36 | NA | NA |
| 14 | Recreational | Nylon (red) | 1999 | 140 | NA | NA |
| 14 | Recreational | Nylon (blue) | 1999 | 42 | NA | NA |
| 15 | Recreational | Nylon | 1998 | 3,202–5,284 | 14.1 ( | 14.1 ( |
| 16 | Recreational | Nylon | 1998 | < 16.2–159.7 | ND | < 8.3 ( |
| 17 | Recreational | Polyethylene | 2001 | 84.9–353.2 | ND | < 8.3 ( |
| 18 | Recreational | Polyethylene | 2006 | < 15.3–< 16.4 | 12.6 ( | 5.84 ( |
| South Korea | ||||||
| 19 | Recreational | Polyethylene | 2007 | 1,400 | NA | NA |
| 19 | Recreational | Polyethylene (yellow) | 2007 | 1,500 | NA | NA |
| 19 | Recreational | Polyethylene (red) | 2007 | 630 | NA | NA |
| 19 | Recreational | Polyethylene (white) | 2007 | 21 | NA | NA |
| Nevada | ||||||
| 20 | Recreational | Polyethylene nylon | 2000 | 85 | 23.33 ( | 11.18 ( |
| 21 | Child care facility | 100% Nylon | 2007 | ND | NA | NA |
| 22 | Child care facility | 100% Nylon | 2005 | 5,100 | ND | 10 ( |
| 23 | Child care facility | 100% Nylon | 2004 | 8,800 | ND | 10 ( |
| 24 | Child care facility | 100% Nylon | 2004 | 5,700 | 42.75 ( | 37.53 ( |
| 25 | Child care facility | 100% Nylon | 2006 | 6,400 | 35 ( | 26.67 ( |
| 26 | Landscape | 100% Nylon | 2005 | 6,200 | 29.77 ( | 29.77 ( |
| 27 | Child care facility | Polyethylene nylon | 2004 | 94 | ND | 10 ( |
| 28 | Child care facility | Polyethylene nylon | 2004 | 1,100 | ND | 10 ( |
| 29 | Recreational | Polyethylene nylon | 2004 | 25 | ND | 10 ( |
| New product | ||||||
| 31 | Residential | Polyethylene nylon | NA | 1,000 | NA | NA |
| 31 | Residential | Polyethylene fraction | NA | < 0.97 | NA | NA |
| 31 | Residential | Nylon fraction | NA | 3,500 | NA | NA |
| 32 | Residential | Nylon | NA | 4,700 | NA | NA |
| 33 | Recreational | Polyethylene | NA | < 0.92 | NA | NA |
| 34 | Recreational | Polyolefin (infill material) | NA | < 0.92 | NA | NA |
Abbreviations: NA, no data available; ND, not detected.
Turf fiber testing: analytical methods: EPA 3050B/6010B, for surfaces 1–13, 19, 31–34; EPA 3050B/7420 for surfaces 14–18, 20–29. Testing highlights synthetic fibers that exceed the CPSIA (2008) lead standard for consumer products of 300 mg/kg (effective 14 August 2009).
Lead dust loading testing: sampling and analytical methods: ASTM method D7144-05a EPA 3050B/6010B for surface 1; HUD guidelines EPA 3050B/7420 for surfaces 2, 15–18; EPA SOP 2040 (modified) EPA 3050B/6010B for surface 3 [see Supplemental Material, Figure 1 (doi:10.1289/ehp.1002239)]; NIOSH (National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health) 9100/7082 for surfaces 20–29. Testing highlights lead dust loading values that exceed the U.S. EPA lead dust hazard standard for floors (U.S. EPA 2001).
Mean lead concentration.
Green turf fibers unless otherwise noted.
Composite sample (green turf fibers) collected from nine locations from the playing surface of turf fields: surfaces 2–13.
HRHC 2008.
Samples below the limit of detection (LOD) were assigned a value of half the LOD to demonstrate the number of samples collected compared with those that contained detectable concentrations of lead: surfaces 15–18, 20–29.
U.S. Army Testing of Polyethylene Turf Demonstrates Lead at 1500 mg/kg (U.S. Army, unpublished data).
Descriptive data for soil, turf, and dust collected at child care and recreational surfaces in Clark County, Nevada, 2008.
| Mean | Median | Mode | SD | Minimum | Maximum | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dust | 32.18 | 24 | 20 | 17.5 | 20 | 81 | 61 |
| Dust | 20.4 | 10 | 10 | 16.18 | 10 | 81 | 132 |
| Soil | 10.41 | 10 | 10 | 3.28 | 7 | 18 | 17 |
| Soil | 9.66 | 10 | 10 | 3.83 | 3 | 18 | 19 |
| Turf | 3,353 | 3,100 | 10 | 3,402 | 10 | 8,800 | 10 |
| Turf | 3,048 | 1,100 | 3.5 | 3,382 | 3.5 | 8,800 | 11 |
Abbreviations: Max, maximum; Min, minimum. Data are from Table 1, surfaces 20–29. Samples below the LOD were assigned a value of half the LOD to demonstrate the number of samples collected compared with those that contained detectable concentrations of lead.
LOD ranged from 10–20 μg/cm2 depending on sample size.
Summary of samples that tested above the LOD.
Summary of all samples collected.
Sampling methods for evaluating lead in or on synthetic turf.
| Purpose of sampling | Medium sampled | Sampling method | Advantages | Disadvantages | Considerations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Determine lead concentration in turf fibers (mg/kg or equivalent) | Turf fibers | Bulk sample of turf fibers | Simple | Does not yield useful exposure information because people are unlikely to ingest intact turf fibers | Not all synthetic turf fibers contain lead |
| Determine lead concentration in dust (mg/kg or equivalent) | Fiber dust | Sweep | Simple | May be difficult to collect adequate mass for laboratory analysis | |
| Micro vacuum (e.g., ASTM Method D7144-05a) ( | Data are relevant for assessing exposure | Some potential for overestimating exposure. Vacuum sampling is reliable for assessing total lead contamination in carpets but may capture embedded dust that is not readily accessible for exposure ( | Other considerable methods ( | ||
| High-volume vacuum (e.g., U.S. EPA’s Standard Operating Procedure 2040) ( | |||||
| Determine lead loading on surface area (μg/ft2 or equivalent) | Fiber dust | Surface wipe | May be superior for ease of use, cost and standardized quality control procedures for laboratory analysis ( | May yield variable results ( | Some household dust studies indicate that dust lead loading is more predictive of children’s blood lead levels than is dust lead concentration ( |
| Micro vacuum | Has been recommended for obtaining information on total lead accumulation ( | Some potential for overestimating exposure ( | A commonly used wipe sampling method is described in U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development guidelines on lead-based paint hazards in housing ( | ||
| High-volume vacuum | |||||
ASTM, American Society for Testing and Materials.
Public health comparison values potentially applicable for evaluating synthetic turf sampling results.
| Synthetic turf medium | Comparison value | Purpose for which value was developed | Potential applicability to synthetic turf | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Turf fibers | 300 mg/kg | Statutory limit on lead content of consumer products intended for use by children | To determine if turf fibers contain lead at levels that may warrant dust sampling | Frequency/duration of exposure to turf is likely less than for toys and other children’s consumer products |
| Turf dust | 400 mg/kg | Hazard standard for lead in bare residential soil (children’s play areas) ( | To determine if the concentration of lead in dust poses a potential lead exposure hazard | Standards designed to be protective of young children in a residential setting |
| 1,200 mg/kg | Hazard standard for lead in bare residential soil (yard-wide average) ( | Greater likely potential for exposure to soil/dust in a residential setting than to dust on synthetic turf | ||
| 40 μg/ft2 | Hazard standard for lead in dust on floors (including carpeted floors) ( | 40 μg/ft2 standard may be more reasonable for turf applications such as in indoor play areas or child care centers where children may have prolonged exposure, than for athletic fields where children are less likely to have frequent, prolonged turf contact |
CPSIA (2008). As of 10 February 2009, the standard was 600 mg/kg. Effective14 August 2009, the standard was reduced to 300 mg/kg. Effective 14 August 2011, the standard will be further reduced to 100 mg/kg unless the CPSC determines that 100 mg/kg is not technologically feasible for a product or product category