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Contaminants of Emerging Concern: 6-PPDq
Chemical Structure of 6PPD-q

What is 6-PPDq?

All tires have a chemical called 6-PPD that keeps them from cracking and extends the life of tires. Through driving, tiny bits of rubber tire particles containing 6-PPD are shed onto driving surfaces. Roughly 10% of these particles enter waterways via stormwater runoff (rain, wind), where 6-PPD reacts with water to form 6-PPD quinone (6PPD-q). 

This could be a ubiquitous microplastic entering surface water systems in developed areas, making 6-PPDq an emerging contaminant of concern.

The concern is that 6-PPDq is toxic to salmonid fish, which includes rainbow, brown and brook trout, all species found in the Delaware River Basin.

DRBC Study

In 2023, the DRBC received grant funding to perform a first of its kind study in the Delaware River Basin to determine the presence of this contaminant in Basin waters.

The study, which will begin in the Spring 2024, will collect samples to develop baseline concentrations of 6-PPDq in trout streams during normal flow and after significant rain events to look at how heavy rainfall affects those concentrations. Initial monitoring will focus on high quality trout streams in the upper Delaware River region, as well as a few other streams in the Basin known for trout fishing.

Sampling Locations:

  • Upper Basin: East Branch Delaware River, West Branch Delaware River, Sherman Creek, Faulkner Brook, Shehawken Creek, Delaware River at Hancock, Delaware River at Lordville and Equinunk Creek.
  • Middle Basin: Dunnfield Creek
  • Lower Basin: Bushkill Creek
  • Lehigh Basin: Little Lehigh Creek
  • Schuylkill Basin: Valley Creek, unnamed tributary to Sixpenny Creek

This work will contribute to the development of comprehensive strategies that identify, characterize and evaluate 6-PPDq in DRB waters.

The DRBC's study was featured in a February 2024 Delaware Currents article authored by Lauren Yates: "DRBC to study chemical from rubber tire particles as source of water contamination".

Resources to Learn More

American Chemical Society

Interstate Technology Regulatory Council

Society of Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry

U.S. EPA

U.S. Geological Society