Chlorine reacts with sweat, urine in pools

Published: Feb. 20, 2008 at 11:38 PM

WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind., Feb. 20 (UPI) -- U.S. researchers have determined how certain airborne contaminants are created when chlorine reacts with sweat and urine in indoor swimming pools.

Purdue University environmental engineer Ernest R. Blatchley III said the findings are a step toward learning how to reduce the formation of "volatile disinfection byproducts" that cause respiratory irritation.

"Some indoor swimming pools seem to have a characteristic chlorine odor," Blatchley said in a statement. "You may think you're smelling chlorine, but you are probably smelling a mixture of disinfection byproducts. If their concentrations get high enough, then they can become an irritant to your respiratory system, to your skin and to your eyes."

Standard tests for swimming pool water detect inorganic byproducts, or chemical compounds that do not contain carbon-hydrogen bonds.

The researchers said they are the first to identify the presence of organic volatile disinfection byproducts, which become airborne and pose health concerns.

The findings were published in the journal Environmental Science & Technology.

Last summer the U.S. National Swimming Championships in Indianapolis were interrupted after swimmers experienced difficulty breathing.

© 2008 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints



Additional News Stories
NHL: Edmonton 5, Colorado 3 (3 min)
MLS: Los Angeles 1, Chivas USA 0 (5 min)
MLS: Houston 1, Seattle 0 (OT) (7 min)
UPI NewsTrack Sports (11 min)
NBA: Oklahoma City 102, Orlando 74 (28 min)
Kurt Busch wins Dickies 500 in Texas
NHL: Atlanta 3, St. Louis 2 (SO)
fark
Afghans replace opium poppies with bumper wheat crop, gluten intolerance grips nation
Investigative journalism class frees 11 innocent people from prison. So the prosecutor subpoenas...
Photoshop theme: Elderly superheros or supervillains
Suicidal, gold-medal winning, former Naval Academy water polo star plunges 212 feet off the GWB...
NY Times reporter tries to learn about Scientology by taking their free personality test. All goes...
A Woman and her two sons live in a rusty 1973 Suburban in Los Angeles. Fark: She's 97 and her sons...