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Workplace Exposure to Nanoparticles during Thermal Spraying of Ceramic Coatings

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TLDR
High time-resolved aerosol data is provided which may be valuable for validating indoor aerosol models applied to risk assessment and for evidence regarding the potential deposition of particulate matter on human respiratory system.
Abstract
Thermal spraying is widely used for industrial-scale application of ceramic coatings onto metallic surfaces. The particular process has implications for occupational health, as the high energy process generates high emissions of metal-bearing nanoparticles. Emissions and their impact on exposure were characterized during thermal spraying in a work environment, by monitoring size-resolved number and mass concentrations, lung-deposited surface area, particle morphology, and chemical composition. Along with exposure quantification, the modal analysis of the emissions assisted in distinguishing particles from different sources, while an inhalation model provided evidence regarding the potential deposition of particulate matter on human respiratory system. High particle number (>10(6) cm-3; 30-40 nm) and mass (60-600 µgPM1 m-3) concentrations were recorded inside the spraying booths, which impacted exposure in the worker area (10(4)-10(5) cm-3, 40-65 nm; 44-87 µgPM1 m-3). Irregularly-shaped, metal-containing particles (Ni, Cr, W) were sampled from the worker area, as single particles and aggregates (5-200 nm). Energy dispersive X-ray analysis confirmed the presence of particles originated from the coating material, establishing a direct link between the spraying activity and exposure. In particle number count, 90% of the particles were between 26-90 nm. Inhaled dose rates, calculated from the exposure levels, resulted in particle number rates (n˙) between 353 × 10(6)-1024 × 10(6) min-1, with 70% of deposition occurring in the alveolar region. The effectiveness of personal protective equipment (FPP3 masks) was tested under real working conditions. The proper sealing of the spraying booths was identified as a key element for exposure reduction. This study provides high time-resolved aerosol data which may be valuable for validating indoor aerosol models applied to risk assessment.

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Citations
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A review of commuter exposure to ultrafine particles and its health effects

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors identified 47 exposure studies performed across 6 transport modes: automobile, bicycle, bus, automobile, rail, walking and ferry, respectively, encompassing approximately 3000 individual trips where UFP concentrations were measured.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nanoparticle exposure and hazard in the ceramic industry: an overview of potential sources, toxicity and health effects

TL;DR: An overview of the current knowledge on occupational exposure to NP in the ceramic industry and their impact on human health is provided and a summary of the existing methods for evaluation and monitoring of ANP in the workplace environment and proposed Nano Reference Values (NRV) for different classes of NP are presented.
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Modeling of High Nanoparticle Exposure in an Indoor Industrial Scenario with a One-Box Model

TL;DR: Results show that one-box models may be useful tools for preliminary risk assessment in occupational settings when room air is well mixed, and indicate a clear underestimation of measured particle concentrations.
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Contribution of Volcanic and Fumarolic Emission to the Aerosol in Marine Atmosphere in the Central Mediterranean Sea: Results from Med-Oceanor 2017 Cruise Campaign

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors studied the contribution of geogenic sources volcanoes and fumaroles to the aerosol in marine atmosphere in the central Mediterranean basin and performed chemical characterization to gather information about the concentration of major and trace elements, elemental carbon (EC), organic carbon (OC), and ionic species.
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