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Acetal Formation of Flavoring Agents with Propylene Glycol in E-Cigarettes: Impacts on Indoor Partitioning and Thirdhand Exposure
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    Occurrence, Fate, and Transport of Contaminants in Indoor Air and Atmosphere

    Acetal Formation of Flavoring Agents with Propylene Glycol in E-Cigarettes: Impacts on Indoor Partitioning and Thirdhand Exposure
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    Environmental Science & Technology

    Cite this: Environ. Sci. Technol. 2023, 57, 50, 21284–21294
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    https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.3c08514
    Published December 8, 2023
    Copyright © 2023 American Chemical Society

    Abstract

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    The widespread use of flavored e-cigarettes has led to a significant rise in teenage nicotine use. In e-liquids, the flavor carbonyls can form acetals with unknown chemical and toxicological properties. These acetals can cause adverse health effects on both smokers and nonsmokers through thirdhand exposure. This study aims to explore the impacts of these acetals formed in e-cigarettes on indoor partitioning and thirdhand exposure. Specifically, the acetalization reactions of commonly used flavor carbonyls in laboratory-made e-liquids were monitored using proton nuclear magnetic resonance (1H NMR) spectroscopy. EAS-E Suite and polyparameter linear free energy relationships (PP-LFERs) were employed to estimate the partitioning coefficients for species. Further, a chemical two-dimensional partitioning model was applied to visualize the indoor equilibrium partitioning and estimate the distribution of flavor carbonyls and their acetals in the gas phase, aerosol phase, and surface reservoirs. Our results demonstrate that a substantial fraction of carbonyls were converted into acetals in e-liquids and their chemical partitioning was significantly influenced. This study shows that acetalization is a determinant factor in the exposure and toxicology of harmful carbonyl flavorings, with its impact extending to both direct exposure to smokers and involuntary exposure to nonsmokers.

    Copyright © 2023 American Chemical Society

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    Supporting Information

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    The Supporting Information is available free of charge at https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acs.est.3c08514.

    • Information about structures of the flavor carbonyls, predicted partitioning coefficients, carbonyl acetal formation, indoor partitioning in PG aerosol, and calculation of the overall Kwa and Koa values (PDF)

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    Environmental Science & Technology

    Cite this: Environ. Sci. Technol. 2023, 57, 50, 21284–21294
    Click to copy citationCitation copied!
    https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.3c08514
    Published December 8, 2023
    Copyright © 2023 American Chemical Society

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