| Literature DB >> 34719600 |
Enrico Oddone1,2, Roberta Pernetti1, Maria Lorena Fiorentino3, Elena Grignani3, Daniele Tamborini4, Gianluca Alaimo5, Ferdinando Auricchio6, Barbara Previtali4, Marcello Imbriani1,2.
Abstract
This paper presents the results of a measurement campaign for assessing the release of particles and the potential exposure of workers in metal additive manufacturing. The monitoring deals with three environments, i.e., two academic laboratories and one production site, while printing different metallic alloys for chemical composition and size. The monitored devices implement different metal 3D printing processes, named Selective Laser Melting, Laser Metal Deposition and Hybrid Laser Metal Deposition, providing a wide overview of the current laser-based Additive Manufacturing technologies. Despite showing the generation of metal powders during the printing processes, the usual measurements based on gravimetric analysis did not highlight concentrations higher than the international exposure limits for the selected metals (i.e., chromium, cobalt, iron, nickel, and copper). Additional data, collected through a cascade impactor and particle counter coupled with the achievements from previous measurements reported in literature, indicate that during the printing operations, fine and ultrafine metal particles might be generated. Finally, the authors introduced a preliminary characterisation of the particles released during the different phases of the investigated AM processes (powder charging, printing, part cleaning and support removal), highlighting how the different operations may affect the particle size and concentration.Entities:
Keywords: Additive manufacturing; Fine particles; Metal particle exposure; Metal particle release; Occupational health
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34719600 PMCID: PMC9453568 DOI: 10.2486/indhealth.2021-0114
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ind Health ISSN: 0019-8366 Impact factor: 2.707