Abstract

The Yangtze River Delta (YRD) is one of the fastest developing areas in eastern China and contains many chemical industry parks. The profiles and sources of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) in soil in chemical industry parks and surrounding areas in the YRD were investigated by analyzing soil samples (n = 64) were collected in the YRD and Rudong chemical park (RD), a typical chemical park in the Yangtze River Delta. The total concentrations of 19 PAHs in the YRD soil samples were 16.3–4694 ng g−1 (mean 688 ng g−1), and the total concentrations of PAHs in RD were 21.6–246 ng g−1 (mean 75.4 ng g−1). The PAHs in soil in YRD were dominated by four-ring and five-ring PAHs, and the PAHs in RD were dominated by two-ring and three-ring PAHs. It suggested that PAHs may have been supplied to soil in YRD predominantly through coal combustion and vehicle emissions, PAHs in the soil of RD may be due to the volatilization and leakage of chemical raw material. According to the different distribution characteristics of PAHs, the ratio (1.5) of (2 + 3) rings/4 rings was proposed to identify the chemical source of PAHs. The PAH isomer ratios and principal component analysis/multiple linear regression (PCA/MLRA) results indicated that PAHs concentrations in soil in the YRD and RD are mainly supplied by industrial and traffic emissions. Incremental lifetime cancer risks (ILCRs) indicated that PAHs in soil pose negligible cancer risks to children and adults, but much stronger risks to children than adults.

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