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A History of Dry Cleaners and Sources of Solvent Releases from Dry Cleaning Equipment
Institution:1. Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Michigan, 2250 G.G. Brown, 2350 Hayward St., Ann Arbor, MI 48109-2125, United States;2. Departments of Chemical Engineering, Biomedical Engineering, Macromolecular Science and Engineering, Biophysics Program, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, United States;1. Institute of Inorganic Chemistry of the Czech Academy of Sciences, v.v.i., ALMA Laboratory, 1001 Husinec-?e?, 250 68 ?e?, Czech Republic;2. Academy of Fine Arts in Prague, ALMA Laboratory, U Akademie 4, 170 22 Prague 7, Czech Republic;1. IBAM-CNR (Institute for the Archaeological and Monumental Heritage), Prov.le Lecce-Monteroni, 73100 Lecce, Italy
Abstract:Approximately 25, 000–35, 000 dry cleaning facilities currently operate in the U.S. The release of perchloroethylene and other solvents from these establishments represents a major source of soil and groundwater contamination. The manner in which dry cleaning solvents escape from dry cleaning plants is, for all practical purposes, identical for chlorinated and petroleum hydrocarbon solvents and is related to one of the following events: the catastrophic failure of a component of the dry cleaning system, the improper installation, operation or maintenance of the dry cleaning equipment or a combination of all of these causes. Acceptable customs, codes and regulations can also dictate what is authorized for operation of a dry cleaning facility in a particular community, geographic area during a particular time frame. Environmental litigation dealing with the origin of a solvent release from dry cleaners tends to focus on the design and manufacture of dry cleaning industry machines such as washers, washer extractors, tumblers, solvent filters, water separators, stills and spotting boards. A thorough analysis of the daily operations of dry cleaners often reveals that poor maintenance, failure to follow the manufacturer's instructions and the actions of the operator are the most likely causes of soil and groundwater pollution. In order to forensically evaluate the most probable origins of a solvent release and to examine issues regarding liability, a thorough understanding of the history of dry cleaning and a detailed analysis of the operation and maintenance of the dry cleaning equipment are necessary. The discovery of solvent plumes in the vicinity of dry cleaning plants may suggest that the solvent source is the dry cleaning plant; however, the presence of these plumes does not necessarily indicate that the dry cleaning equipment was defectively designed or manufactured. A thorough review of the type of equipment used over the life of the dry cleaning plant and verifiable solvent mileage records frequently indicates that operators of the plant have disposed of solvent and contaminated solids into the municipal sewer or on ground surfaces.
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