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Three months
ago, I had a pre-engineered hardwood floating floor installed on the
first floor. The installers used an adhesive (made up of polyvinyl
acetate and diethylene glycol monobutyl ether acetate) to glue the
planks together. The top coating was factory applied. The topcoat has
a number of chemicals according to the MSDS. According to the
manufacturer, there should be no odor emitted after it cures or any
harmful effects due to the flooring and glue. It has been three months
and I can still smell the glue when I get down close to the floor. I
also notice that my nose starts to run when I am on the first floor and
that the air quality is different from the upstairs. I am able to pick
up the air quality change, my wife has difficulty doing so. Are the
listed ingredients harmful and what has been your experience with
pre-engineered floors? Should I test the air or take a piece of
flooring and have it analyzed? After three months, you would think that
the floors would have off gas?-
Daniel, New York
I am assuming that the hardwood
flooring you describe is on all-hardwood product and does not consist of
any composite wood materials. If composite wood materials were present
as a part of the assembly, it is quite possible that it would liberate
formaldehyde. Whether the associated air concentrations would be
sufficient to cause runny nose and other irritant symptoms is difficult
to say since there is no available literature on formaldehyde emissions
from such materials.
Let us assume that no composite
materials are present in the pre-engineered hardwood flooring (and that
it is not covered with a plastic laminate). As such adhesives could be a
significant source of air contaminants. Adhesives consist of a large
variety of solvents that vaporize during curing. The polyvinyl acetate
and diethylene glycol monobutyl ether acetate are but two of the many
solvent chemicals likely to be present. They are listed on the MSDS
because they are present in the greatest concentration.
Solvents have different evaporation
times from such materials. Polyvinyl acetate is relatively volatile and
will likely take weeks to months before it vaporizes to non-olfactory
detectable levels. Diethylene glycol monobutyl ether acetate on the
other hand may take a year or more to vaporize down to non-olfactory
detectable levels.
The runny nose symptom and the sense of
a difference in downstairs air quality are interesting. It indicates
that one or more irritant chemicals are present. The question is, what
are they? My best guess is that it may be formaldehyde. Formaldehyde
is emitted in significant quantities from some finish coatings applied
to furniture, cabinets and hardwood flooring. If the factory-applied
topcoat was an acid-cured finish, then formaldehyde is likely to be the
problem. Ask the manufacturer if the top coat was an acid-cured finish.
April 14, 2003
Indoor Environmental Quality (2000), Thad Godish Ph.D., C.I.H
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