China Daily

Human sniffers help identify toxic tracks

- By LIU KUN in Wuhan and WANG XIAODONG in Beijing Contact the writers at wangxiaodo­ng@ chinadaily.com.cn

At a laboratory in Wuhan, Hubei province, five certified odor identifier­s — people with sensitive noses — were assigned a special task. Each of them, wearing a white gown, opened a bottle containing a 20-gram sample of synthetic running track material, and inhaled slowly for five seconds. Then they wrote down their results.

The sniffers, who are among the first such profession­als in Wuhan, were testing whether the plastic, planned for use in a running track installati­on at a primary school, measured up to environmen­tal standards. Another technician will give the samples a final score based on the scores given by the sniffers.

“It is very difficult to test products made of complex synthetic materials, such as plastic tracks, by physical or chemical instrument­s because most instrument­s can only test for a few substances at most, such as formaldehy­de or toluene,” said Wang Zhaohui of the testing and research center of the Sports Engineerin­g Key Lab of the General Administra­tion of Sport in Wuhan. “Smelling is a more direct and reliable way to determine whether a sample is poisonous.”

After the work of the odor identifier­s, other tests using physical or chemical instrument­s will be conducted to determine whether the samples are up to standards, Wang said.

Odor identifier­s are usually employed to determine whether emissions of one kind or another are within a certain limit. The results provided by the certified sniffers have legal effects. Pollutant sources that emit excessive odors — as determined by the expert sniffers — are subject to punishment under laws and regulation­s, Wang said.

The center has 15 certified odor identifier­s whose average age is 30, said the center’s Shang Jianhua, who has been an odor identifier for three years.

Odor identifier­s must be in good condition, and they must adhere to strict requiremen­ts, such as not using cosmetics or eating hot pot, which could affect their sense of smell, he said.

The center is planning to train odor identifier­s specifical­ly for plastic track producers so that better quality tracks can be made, Wang said.

Synthetic running tracks became a top concern for parents who have children in primary or middle schools after media reports about complaints about toxic tracks that sickened children.

In Sijing Third Primary School in Shanghai’s Songjiang district, dozens of students displayed symptoms such as nosebleeds, coughs and sore eyes in September. Many of their parents blamed it on substandar­d plastic material used on the playground, saying it emitted a strong odor, according to a report in China Youth Daily in October.

Testing reports provided by the school showed that toxic gases emitted from samples — including formaldehy­de, benzene and toluene — met the standards adopted in Shanghai, the report said.

Local standards for emissions of plastic tracks may not be reliable and may need improvemen­t, the report said.

 ?? LIU KUN / CHINA DAILY ?? An odor identifier sniffs a sample of material to be used for a plastic track to determine whether it meets environmen­tal standards.
LIU KUN / CHINA DAILY An odor identifier sniffs a sample of material to be used for a plastic track to determine whether it meets environmen­tal standards.

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