Abstract

The levels of 13 polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) and 12 polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) were studied in oil shale ash samples gathered after heating oil shale samples collected from major deposit sites in Jordan. All analyses were carried out using GC/MS instrument. The results showed that the total concentration of the studied polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAHs) was the highest (75.99–317.53 μg /kg) at the lowest temperature range (200–400°C) and it decreased as the temperature increased. For the heating temperature range 400–600°C the concentrations were all decreased to below the limit of quantification while none of the samples contained any of the studied PAHs at the highest temperature range 600–800°C. While all the analyzed samples did not contain any of the studied 13 compounds of PCBs at different temperature ranges.Recoveries of PAHs and PCBs were found between 82–106% and 91–114%, respectively. Precision of the analytical method for both PAHs and PCBs, calculated as relative standard deviation (RSD), ranged from 0.95–7.08% and 0.78–9.03%, respectively. The limit of detection values for PAHs and PCBs were between 0.006–0.070 μg/kg and 0.149–0.330 μg/kg, respectively.The total estimated cancer risks of exposure to PAHs in the soil samples were ranged from 9.13 × 10−7 to 2.15 × 10−6. By multiplying these numbers of cancer risks of exposure to oil shale ash sample-PAHs by 106, it is possible to determine the maximum theoretical number of cancer cases per million of people. The maximum estimated cancer risks cases determined in this study (2 out of 1 million) are well within the acceptable range of excess cancer risk specified by the US Environmental Protection Agency.

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