By depositing molten plastic layer
upon layer, three-dimensional (3-D) printers can crank out almost
anything, from toys to guns to artificial limbs. The surging 3-D printer
market has made desktop versions affordable for schools and libraries.
But the printers’ growing prevalence has raised concerns about
potential negative health effects from inhaling toxic volatile organic
compounds (VOCs) and particles given off by the devices.Three-dimensional printers are full of
possibility, but without controls, they could harm indoor air quality. Credit: Shutterstock.Although
the government has set workplace standards for a few of the VOCs released
by 3-D printers, these are for healthy, working-age adults in industrial settings such as tire or plastic manufacturing plants: None of the compounds is regulated in homes or libraries where 3-D printers might be used by sensitive populations such as children. Furthermore, researchers don’t know the identity of most of the compounds emitted by printers. “Scientists know
that particles and VOCs are bad for health, but they don’t
have enough information to create a regulatory standard for 3-D printers,” says Marina E.
Vance, an environmental engineer at the University of Colorado,
Boulder.What’s more, data from early studies of 3-D
printer emissions are difficult to use in developing standards because
of variability in the test conditions, says Rodney J.
Weber, an aerosol chemist at Georgia Institute of Technology.Two years ago, UL, an independent safety certification company, established an advisory board and began funding research
projects to answer basic questions about the amounts and types of
compounds in 3-D printer emissions, what levels are safe, and how to minimize
exposures, says Marilyn S. Black, a vice president at UL. The company
is working to create a consistent testing and evaluation method so
that researchers will be able to compare data across different labs.
“By this fall we will put out an ANSI (American National Standards Institute) standard for measuring particles and VOCs for everyone to use,”
she says.
Printing Plastic
A 3-D printer creates an object by
feeding coils of plastic filament through a nozzle that melts the
plastic at temperatures up to 320 °C and then extrudes it onto
a moving baseplate. A computer directs the motion of the baseplate
so that layers of material build up until the foreordained 3-D shape
emerges.“We know that when you melt plastic at high
temperatures, the long chains of organic matter in the plastic partially
degrade and release potentially harmful volatile organic compounds
and ultrafine particles (UFPs) into the air,” says Brent Stephens, an environmental engineer at Illinois Institute of Technology.
He and other researchers have found that the most common filament
materials can cause potentially unhealthy emissions when used in 3-D printers.
Petroleum-based acrylonitrile butadiene styrene (ABS), a plastic used
in Lego blocks, gives off styrene and formaldehyde—the first
a suspected human carcinogen and the second a known one. Nylon releases
caprolactam, a respiratory irritant. Polylactic acid (PLA)—a
corn-based plastic found in medical implants, drinking cups, and disposable
diapers—emits methyl methacrylate, a mild skin irritant. And
all the filament types spew UFPs, particles with a diameter less than
100 nm that can penetrate deep into the lungs and enter the bloodstream.
These particles are known to cause respiratory and cardiovascular
diseases.Filaments
of acrylonitrile butadiene styrene are one common feedstock for 3-D
printers. Credit: Shutterstock.As laser printers heat and lay down ink, they
give off numbers of ultrafine particles comparable to those from 3-D printers,
but that does not mean they have the same health risk, says Aleksandr
B. Stefaniak, an industrial hygienist at the U.S. National
Institute for Occupational Safety and Health. Although
both types of printers use plastic “ink,” laser toner
is heated only briefly to melt it onto a sheet of paper. In contrast,
a 3-D print job can last hours or days as filament is continuously
melted through the extruder nozzle. Because of the prolonged melting,
3-D printer emissions include hundreds of VOCs and vast numbers of
particles of unknown composition.Some early tests hint that
operating 3-D printers can lead to unhealthy aerosol levels. Weber
measured VOCs given off by a 3-D printer in a 1-m3 environmental
chamber, while colleagues modeled levels that would be found in an
office using the same machine. The model predicted that caprolactam
room concentrations would reach 100 μg/m3 —more
than 14 times as great as California’s acceptable level of
7 μg/m3 (1.4 ppb) for an 8 h exposure. Formaldehyde
would reach concentrations above those recommended by the World Health
Organization for indoor air.Also, Stefaniak and his team looked at the health
effects of 3-D printer emissions on rats. Particles in
outdoor air can cause cardiovascular disease in humans, so Stefaniak
looked for similar effects from 3-D-printer releases. He
and his team exposed rats for 3 h to emissions from a printer using
black ABS and performed various tests on the rats’ cardiovascular
systems before and after exposure. Twenty-four hours after exposure,
the rats’ blood pressure had jumped by about 30%, and their
arteries had stiffened relative to before the exposure. “Now we want to identify
the causative agent and find out how it works,” he says.
It’s
all about the filament
The formulation of the filament and
the temperature to which it is heated are critical to generating particles
and VOCs, Weber says. “The higher the temperature, the more
gases are produced, and the more particles that ultimately form,”
he says. Heat degrades the plastic and volatilizes the compounds.
As they cool, the gases form particles and also condense onto small particles already present
in the room. Weber speculates that temperature
is the reason ABS filaments release more VOCs and particles compared
with PLA: ABS softens at a higher temperature than PLA, so printers
typically heat ABS to 240 °C, whereas PLA is processed at 220
°C.Scanning
electron micrograph shows a polylactic acid particle stuck to a filter.
Credit: NIOSH.Filament additives—included
to add shine, electrical conductivity, color, or other properties—can
change emissions dramatically. For example, PLA that includes trace
substances to make it impact resistant generates more particles than
standard ABS, Weber says. Stefaniak has detected particles containing
chromium, nickel, and aluminum during printing, possibly produced by metal-containing dyes within colored ABS
filaments. “These metals can generate reactive oxygen species
that promote inflammation, a condition associated with some lung diseases,”
he says.Such findings hint that additives account for most
of the releases of fine particles. Yet manufacturers don’t
have to reveal the identity of the compounds on material safety data
sheets, Weber says. He has noticed that different brands of filament
create widely differing numbers of particles, a finding he suspects
is due to unknown additives.
Proceed with Caution
When the ANSI/UL
printer testing standards debut this fall, they will also include a voluntary threshold for allowable levels of emissions from 3-D printers. “For
VOCs there are lots of existing standards for specific compounds such
as formaldehyde, styrene, and caprolactam,” UL’s Black
says. Because there is much less information about UFPs, UL will set
a limit based on what is possible now by redesigning
printers and reformulating filaments.For example, manufacturers
can substitute better, safer filaments and enclose printers in cabinets
that remove UFPs and VOCs through high-efficiency particulate air
(HEPA) filters. When Stefaniak and his colleagues enclosed the 3-D
printers at a Texas business in HEPA-filter-ventilated chambers, particle
concentrations in the print room fell by 98%. In a recent study that combined low-emitting filaments, lower nozzle temperatures,
and a printer cover with a HEPA filter, UFPs measured in a testing
chamber fell by 99.95%, says Chungsik Yoon,
an occupational hygienist at Seoul National University. These findings suggest achievable limits, Yoon says. (And with
or without these advances in technology, workers in industrial
settings and hobbyists can reduce their emissions exposure simply
by putting their 3-D printers in well-ventilated rooms, apart from
where other activities take place.)UL is taking essentially
the same approach that Germany’s Blue Angel Ecolabel Program took when it set a standard for laser printers.
Black predicts that companies will compete to meet the standard, as
producers of laser printers did after Blue Angel issued a standard
in 2012. ANSI will continuously revise the standard as scientists
learn more about the health impacts of 3-D printers.“The
maker space from which 3-D printers come is pretty innovative, so
I feel optimistic that we will reduce exposures to harmful aerosols,”
Stephens says.
Janet Pelley is
a freelance contributor to
, the weekly newsmagazine of the American
Chemical Society.
Authors: Lynn E Secondo; Hayat I Adawi; John Cuddehe; Kenneth Hopson; Allison Schumacher; Larry Mendoza; Charles Cartin; Nastassja A Lewinski Journal: Atmos Environ (1994) Date: 2020-02-06 Impact factor: 4.798