Title
Potential Release of Manufactured Nano Objects during Sanding of Nano-Coated Wood Surfaces
Author
Fransman, W.
Bekker, C.
Tromp, P.
Duis, W.B.
Publication year
2016
Abstract
Increasing production and applications of manufactured nano objects (MNOs) have become a source for human exposure and therefore raise concerns and questions about the possible health effects. In this study, the potential release of nano objects, their agglomerates, and aggregates (NOAA) as a result of sanding of hardwood treated with MNOs-containing coating was examined. Two types of MNO-containing coating were compared with untreated hardwood that allowed the evaluation of the influence of the chemical composition on the release of particles. Furthermore, the rotation speed of the sander and the grit size of the sanding paper were varied in order to assess their influence on the release of particles. Measurements were conducted in a gas-Tight chamber with a volume of 19.5 m3 in which ventilation was minimized during experiments. Particle size distributions were assessed by scanning mobility particle sizer, aerodynamic particle sizer, and electrical low pressure impactor. Furthermore, aerosol number concentrations (Nanotracer), active surface area (LQ1), and fractionated mass (Cascade Impactor) were measured before, during, and after sanding. Scanning electron microscope/energy dispersive X-ray (SEM/EDX) analysis was performed to adequately characterize the morphology, size, and chemical composition of released particles. SEM/EDX analysis indicated that sanding surfaces treated with MNO-containing coating did not release the designated MNO as free primary particles. In both coatings, clusters of MNO were perceived embedded in and attached to micro-sized wood and/or coating particles created by sanding the coated surface. Real-Time measurements indicated a lower release of micro-sized particles from sanding of surfaces treated with Coating I than from sanding untreated surfaces or surfaces treated with Coating II. A substantial increase in nanosized and a slight increase in micro-sized particles was perceived as the rotation speed of the sander increased. However, most nanosized particles were most likely emitted by the sanding machine. No effect of the grit size on the release of particles was detected. © 2016 The Author 2016. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the British Occupational Hygiene Society.
Subject
Life
RAPID - Risk Analysis for Products in Development
ELSS - Earth, Life and Social Sciences
Biomedical Innovation
Nanotechnology
Healthy Living
Direct-reading instruments
Exposure assessment
Manufactured nano objects
Particle monitoring ultrafines
Chemical analysis
Coatings
Hardwoods
Meteorological instruments
Particle size
Sanders
Scanning electron microscopy
Direct readings
Exposure assessment
Nano-coatings
Nano-objects
Release
Sanding
Ultra-fines
Particle size analysis
To reference this document use:
http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:e8930761-420b-4a60-969d-ded58e3eaabb
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1093/annhyg/mew031
TNO identifier
572377
ISSN
0003-4878
Source
Annals of Occupational Hygiene, 60 (7), 875-884
Document type
article