The partitioning of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in soil multiphase system is a critical process for vapour intrusion, however, the importance of vapour-solid interface adsorption doesn't receive the due attention, which causes the exposure assessment too conservative particularly in arid conditions. This paper proposed a multiphase partitioning equilibrium (MPE) model establishing the quantitative relationship between VOCs and its various partitioning phases in soil, including solid-liquid interface adsorption phase, vapour phase and dissolved phase and vapour-solid interface adsorption phase. Taking benzene as the targeted pollutant, the model was found in good agreement with the experimental data while the errors were within one magnitude basically. The role of vapour-solid interface adsorption under different soil moisture conditions was also investigated by the model. The results reveals that a) soil moisture is the conspicuous controlling factor that affects the benzene partitioning in soil; b) vapour-solid interface adsorption dominates benzene uptake when soil relative saturation (RS) is under 20% among three typical soils; c) as adsorption by soil minerals (vapour-solid interface adsorption) is reduced by increasing amounts of humidity (RS > 20%), uptake by partitioning into the soil organic matter (OM) increasingly becomes a controlling factor; d) the common sense that vapour concentration of benzene is particularly high with low level of RS may not occur since the vapour-solid interface adsorption dominates benzene uptake in arid environment. The MPE model is suitable for prediction of VOCs partitioning and vapour exposure risk assessment of contaminated soil in arid area.
Keywords: Contaminated soil; Moisture; Organic matter; Organic pollutants; Partitioning.
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