Literature DB >> 27754775

Whole glove permeation of cyclohexanol through disposable nitrile gloves on a dextrous robot hand and comparison with the modified closed-loop ASTM F739 method 1. No fist clenching.

Airek R Mathews1, Shane S Que Hee1.   

Abstract

The aim was to develop a whole glove permeation method for cyclohexanol to generate permeation parameter data for a non-moving dextrous robot hand (normalized breakthrough time tb, standardized breakthrough time ts, steady state permeation rate Ps, and diffusion coefficient D). Four types of disposable powderless, unsupported, and unlined nitrile gloves from the same producer were investigated: Safeskin Blue and Kimtech Science Blue, Purple, and Sterling. The whole glove method developed involved a peristaltic pump for water circulation through chemically resistant Viton tubing to continually wash the inner surface of the test glove via holes in the tubing, a dextrous robot hand operated by a microprocessor, a chemically protective nitrile glove to protect the robot hand, an incubator to maintain 35°C temperature, and a hot plate to maintain 35°C at the sampling point of the circulating water. Aliquots of 1.0 mL were sampled at regular time intervals for the first 60 min followed by removal of 0.5 mL aliquots every hour to 8 hr. Quantification was by the internal standard method after gas chromatography-selective ion electron impact mass spectrometry using a non-polar capillary column. The individual glove values of tb and ts differed for the ASTM closed loop method except for Safeskin Blue, but did not for the whole glove method. Most of the kinetic parameters agreed within an order of magnitude for the two techniques. The order of most protective to least protective glove was Blue and Safeskin, then Purple followed by Sterling for the whole gloves. The analogous order for the modified F739 ASTM closed loop method was: Safeskin, Blue, Purple, and Sterling, almost the same as for the whole glove. The Sterling glove was "not recommended" from the modified ASTM data, and was "poor" from the whole glove data.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Cyclohexanol; gas chromatography-mass spectrometry; glove permeation; hand protection; infrared reflectance

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2017        PMID: 27754775     DOI: 10.1080/15459624.2016.1250005

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Occup Environ Hyg        ISSN: 1545-9624            Impact factor:   2.155


  4 in total

Review 1.  Glove permeation of chemicals: The state of the art of current practice, Part 1: Basics and the permeation standards.

Authors:  Sean Banaee; Shane S Que Hee
Journal:  J Occup Environ Hyg       Date:  2019-11-04       Impact factor: 2.155

2.  Double gloving of disposable nitrile gloves exposed to diethylene glycol mono-n-butyl ether.

Authors:  Sayaka Takaku-Pugh; Shane Que Hee
Journal:  J Occup Environ Hyg       Date:  2020-05-29       Impact factor: 2.155

Review 3.  Glove permeation of chemicals: The state of the art of current practice-Part 2. Research emphases on high boiling point compounds and simulating the donned glove environment.

Authors:  Sean Banaee; Shane S Que Hee
Journal:  J Occup Environ Hyg       Date:  2020-03-25       Impact factor: 2.155

4.  Permeation of limonene through disposable nitrile gloves using a dextrous robot hand.

Authors:  Sean Banaee; Shane S Que Hee
Journal:  J Occup Health       Date:  2017-01-21       Impact factor: 2.708

  4 in total

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