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1. Vapor Intrusion Robert J. Zwald, CPG
Fishbeck, Thompson, Carr & Huber, Inc.
A&WMA � West Michigan Chapter
16th Annual Spring Conference
March 19, 2008
2. Introduction
ASTM Standard for Vapor Intrusion
Vapor Intrusion in Michigan
Mitigation
Case Study
3. Definition Vapor intrusion (VI) is an indoor air quality condition that occurs when evaporating chemicals migrate from polluted soil and groundwater in the form of hazardous vapors into overlying buildings.
4. ASTM Standard
5. ASTM E 2600 ASTM E 2600, �Standard Practice for Assessment of Vapor Intrusion into Structures on Property Involved in Real Estate Transactions� � Adopted March 4, 2008
Addresses vapor intrusion (VI) arising from contaminated soil and groundwater specifically as it can impact real estate transactions
It provides guidance on the VI assessment process, from screening to mitigation
6. Terminology Chemicals of Concern (COC): Chemical that can potentially migrate as a vapor into a structure, and is generally recognized as having an adverse impact on human health. COC generally meet specific criteria for volatility and toxicity.
Vapor Intrusion Condition (VIC): The presence or likely presence of any chemicals of concern in the indoor air environment of existing or planned structures on a property caused by the release of vapor from contaminated soil or groundwater on the property or within close proximity to the property, at a concentration that presents or may present unacceptable health risk to occupants.
PVIC � Potential VIC
7. Relationship to a Phase I ESA VI is a non-scope consideration in E 1527
May be included as supplement
Phase I information used as part of VI screening
Assumptions made in Phase I carry to VI screening under ASTM VI standard
8. Four Tiered Assessment Tier 1 � Initial Screening
Tier 2 � Semi-Site Specific Screening
Tier 3 � VIC Assessment
Tier 4 � Mitigation
9. Four Tiered Assessment cont�d Tiers 1 and 2 identify if a PVIC exists
Tier 3 identifies approaches to assess if a vapor intrusion condition exists that can threaten human health
Tier 4 identifies general mitigation alternatives
10. Tier 1 � Screening Does PVIC exist within area of concern?
COCs within 1/3 mile
Petroleum Hydrocarbons 1/10 mile
Upgradient default to ASTM radii
Use standard Phase I ESA practices to determine potential
Professional judgment
11. Tier 2 � Numerical Screening Review of existing data
Regulatory records
Previous investigations
Collect new data
Soil/groundwater sampling
Soil gas sampling
Combination, as needed
�and, oh yeah�professional judgment
12. Tier 3 � VIC Assessment Does VIC exist?
Interior (in or below occupied structure) testing
Modeling
Combination
Endpoints defined
Yes
No
Maybe/maybe not�
13. Tier 4 � Mitigation VIC exists
VIC maybe exists
Measures need to be taken
14. The Obligatory Flowchart �.zzzzzz�.
15. Non-Scope Considerations Explosion hazards (methane)
Naturally occurring gasses
Indoor air quality contributors
Other
16. A Little More on Methane Not a �COC�
Non-toxic
Very transient by nature
Natural and man-made sources
17. Vapor Intrusion in Michigan
18. Upcoming Rules and Regs Draft, peer review, revised, under development, etc�
Op Memo No. 4, Attachment 4, Soil Gas and Indoor Air
Sampling strategy guidance
Mitigation options
Technical Support Document for Indoor Air and Soil Gas
19. Upcoming Rules and Regs cont�d Attachments to Op Memo No. 2
Attachment 9: Analytical methods, parameters and reporting limits for soil gas
Attachment 10: Target Method Detection Limits for ambient air
Op Memo 4, Attachment 5 � Methane
Sampling strategy guidance
Mitigation options
20. Implications of E 2600 Michigan�s exposure based cleanup criteria already encourages pathway evaluation
ESA/BEA cleanup liability scheme should be minimally affected
Could be �due care� concerns
21. Mitigation
22. Mitigation Options Institutional Controls
Deed restrictions
Other land use mechanisms
Engineering Controls
Source Removal/Treatment
Barriers/Liners/Venting
23. Mitigation Options cont�d Intrinsically Safe Building Design
HVAC system controls
Open air basement/first floor
Monitors/Alarms
Combinations of above options
24. Case Study Landfill Redevelopment
Auburn Hills and Orion Township, Michigan
25. Background Former unregulated landfill (dump)
145 Acres, in Oakland County�s �Automation Alley�
60 acres of waste, up to 80 feet deep
Minor hits of VOCs, including TCE, PCE, benzene
Methane levels up to 80% in air
Commercial/Industrial Park
29. Mitigation Solutions Source Removal
Subfloor Venting
Vapor Barriers
Building Controls
Indoor Air Monitoring
HVAC
30. Source Removal Extensive SVE system
Over 60 extraction wells
Over 10,000 feet of manifold piping
Single discharge point
Flare treatment
32. Subfloor Venting / Vapor Barrier Series of perforated pipes below slab
Captures gas and prevents buildup
Vented to atmosphere
Optional tie in to SVE system
�Liquid Boot� spray-on membrane
Between vents and slab
Optimal perforation integrity
35. Building Controls Combustible gas indicators (CGI) throughout building
Tied into fire alarm systems
Low level alarm triggers HVAC and alert
High level alarm triggers fire alarm and evacuation
Bullet
38. Thank You www.ftch.com