Assessment of airborne nanoparticles present in industry of aluminum surface treatments

被引:6
|
作者
Santos, R. J. [1 ]
Vieira, M. T. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Coimbra, Fac Sci & Technol, CEMUC Grp Nanomat & Microfabricat, Dept Mech Engn, P-3030788 Coimbra, Portugal
关键词
Airborne nanoparticles; aluminum surface treatments; exposure; unintended; workplace; ENGINEERED NANOPARTICLES; NANOMATERIALS; RISK; WORKERS; OXIDE; AREA;
D O I
10.1080/15459624.2016.1254782
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Conventional industrial processes are emission sources of unintended nanoparticles which are potentially harmful for the environment and human health. The aim of this study is to assess airborne nanoparticle release from aluminum surface treatment processes in various workplaces. Two direct reading instruments, a scanning mobility particle sizer to measure size distribution and a nanoparticle surface area monitoring to measure the surface area of particles deposited in the human lung, were employed to perform area monitoring. The lacquering paint was the process which released the highest concentration of particles from 10487nm( 7.06x10(6) particles/cm(3)). The lacquering baths process emitted particles of the largest average size (76.9 nm) and the largest surface area deposited in the human lung (167.4 mu m(2)/cm(3)). Conversely, the anodizing bath process generated particles of the smallest average size (44.3 nm) and the lowest human lung-deposited surface area (1.2 mu m(2)/cm(3)). The total number of particles and the surface area can only be fairly correlated for environments in which the surface area presented higher values. The transmission electron microscopy analysis confirmed the presence of aluminum oxide particles of different dimensions near the LB and AB areas and polymeric-based particles near the LP areas. The findings of this study indicated that lacquering and anodizing surface treatments are indeed responsible for the emission of airborne nanoparticles. It also highlights the importance of control strategies as a means of protecting workers' health and environment.
引用
收藏
页码:D29 / D36
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Potential applications of UV surface treatments in the textile industry
    Millington, KR
    RADTECH'98 NORTH AMERICA UV/EB CONFERENCE PROCEEDINGS, 1998, : 601 - 609
  • [22] Chrome free surface treatments for galvanized steels—present and future
    Nakamura MITSURU
    Baosteel Technical Research, 2010, 4(S1) (S1) : 44 - 44
  • [23] Computational study of the surface properties of aluminum nanoparticles
    Medasani, Bharat
    Vasiliev, Igor
    SURFACE SCIENCE, 2009, 603 (13) : 2042 - 2046
  • [24] Deposition of Cu Nanoparticles on the Surface of Metallic Aluminum
    Lescinskis, A.
    Katkevics, J.
    Erts, D.
    Viksna, A.
    INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS AND NANOTECHNOLOGIES (FM&NT2012), 2012, 38
  • [25] Synthesis and surface modification of aluminum oxide nanoparticles
    Lashanizadegan, Maryam
    Farzi, Gholamali
    Nia, Nasrin Erfani
    JOURNAL OF CERAMIC PROCESSING RESEARCH, 2014, 15 (05): : 316 - 319
  • [26] ECONOMIC ASSESSMENT OF IMPACT OF PRESENT SHORTAGES ON WATER INDUSTRY
    STALLWORTH, TE
    JOURNAL AMERICAN WATER WORKS ASSOCIATION, 1975, 67 (04): : 171 - 172
  • [27] OUTGASSING CHARACTERISTICS OF STAINLESS STEEL AND ALUMINUM WITH DIFFERENT SURFACE TREATMENTS
    YOUNG, JR
    JOURNAL OF VACUUM SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY, 1969, 6 (03): : 398 - &
  • [28] THE INFLUENCE OF REDOX CHEMICAL SURFACE TREATMENTS ON SILVER NANOPARTICLES
    Tudose, M.
    Munteanu, C.
    Marinescu, G.
    Culita, D.
    Ionita, P.
    DIGEST JOURNAL OF NANOMATERIALS AND BIOSTRUCTURES, 2013, 8 (04) : 1761 - 1770
  • [29] Surface Treatments for Enhancing the Bonding Strength of Aluminum Alloy Joints
    Luo, Juncheng
    Liu, Jianhua
    Xia, Huanxiong
    Ao, Xiaohui
    Yin, Haojie
    Guo, Lei
    MATERIALS, 2023, 16 (16)
  • [30] SWEPT FSSW IN ALUMINUM ALLOYS THROUGH SEALANTS AND SURFACE TREATMENTS
    Witthar, Karin
    Brown, Jeremy
    Burford, Dwight
    FRICTION STIR WELDING AND PROCESSING VI, 2011, : 417 - 424