| DICHLOROMETHANE
FACT SHEET Brief Overview: Contaminant:
Dichloromethane Category: Organic MCL:
5 PPB Source: Paint
remover, extraction, cleaning solvent Effect: Nervous
system, liver, blood damage; Cancer. Followup: Treat
and retest quarterly Treatment: Granular
activated charcoal Details: Source:
Dichloromethane (DCM) is a colorless organic liquid with a sweet, chloroform-like
odor. The greatest use of DCM is as a paint remover. Other uses include: solvent
and cleaning agent in a variety of industries, a fumigant for strawberries and
grains; and to extract substances from foodstuffs. Production of DCM
has been decreasing: from a high of 561 million lbs. in 1986, to roughly 410 million
lbs. in 1993. It is released in wastewater primarily from the following industries:
Paint and ink, aluminum forming, coal mining, photographic equipment and supplies,
pharmaceutical, organic chemical/plastics, metal foundries and laundries. DCM
is also formed during the chlorination of water. From 1987 to 1993,
according to EPA's Toxic Chemical Release Inventory, DCM releases to land and
water totalled over 2.1 million lbs. These releases were primarily from medicinals
and botanicals industries. The largest releases occurred in Connecticut and New
York. What happens to DCM when it is released to the environment? Most DCM
is released to air where it is degraded by sunlight within a few months. Releases
to water evaporate very quickly. It will evaporate from soil but can also leach
through soil to ground water. DCM is not likely to accumulate in aquatic life.
Effect: Short-term: EPA has found dichloromethane
to potentially cause the following health effects when people are exposed to it
at levels above the MCL for relatively short periods of time: Damage to the nervous
system and to blood. Long-term: Dichloromethane has the potential to cause
the following effects from a lifetime exposure at levels above the MCL: liver
damage; cancer. Followup: Treat
and retest quarterly.
Treatment:
Granular activated charcoal in combination with Packed Tower Aeration.
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