| Literature DB >> 35214925 |
Antti Joonas Koivisto1,2,3, Benedetta Del Secco4, Sara Trabucco4, Alessia Nicosia4, Fabrizio Ravegnani4, Marko Altin5, Joan Cabellos6, Irini Furxhi7,8, Magda Blosi9, Anna Costa9, Jesús Lopez de Ipiña10, Franco Belosi4.
Abstract
Spray coatings' emissions impact to the environmental and occupational exposure were studied in a pilot-plant. Concentrations were measured inside the spray chamber and at the work room in Near-Field (NF) and Far-Field (FF) and mass flows were analyzed using a mechanistic model. The coating was performed in a ventilated chamber by spraying titanium dioxide doped with nitrogen (TiO2N) and silver capped by hydroxyethylcellulose (Ag-HEC) nanoparticles (NPs). Process emission rates to workplace, air, and outdoor air were characterized according to process parameters, which were used to assess emission factors. Full-scale production exposure potential was estimated under reasonable worst-case (RWC) conditions. The measured TiO2-N and Ag-HEC concentrations were 40.9 TiO2-μg/m3 and 0.4 Ag-μg/m3 at NF (total fraction). Under simulated RWC conditions with precautionary emission rate estimates, the worker's 95th percentile 8-h exposure was ≤171 TiO2 and ≤1.9 Ag-μg/m3 (total fraction). Environmental emissions via local ventilation (LEV) exhaust were ca. 35 and 140 mg-NP/g-NP, for TiO2-N and Ag-HEC, respectively. Under current situation, the exposure was adequately controlled. However, under full scale production with continuous process workers exposure should be evaluated with personal sampling if recommended occupational exposure levels for nanosized TiO2 and Ag are followed for risk management.Entities:
Keywords: Conditions of Use (CoU); NF/FF model; deposited dose; emission; exposure; risk assessment; spray coating
Year: 2022 PMID: 35214925 PMCID: PMC8876979 DOI: 10.3390/nano12040596
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanomaterials (Basel) ISSN: 2079-4991 Impact factor: 5.076
Figure 1The coating system. (A) Schematic representation of the coating machine (not in scale; lengths are in cm), (B) NF measurement station at the spray chamber exit (red arrow in (A)). Stationary measurements were carried out from inside the spray chamber, NF and FF. Length of the coating system is ca. 22 m, the spray chamber width, length, and height are 3.5, 2.0, and 1.0 m, respectively, the conveyer belt width is 1.2 m and total with is 1.7 m and the belt speed can be adjusted from 0.1 to 1 m/min. Distance of NF instruments from the spray was ca. 1.5 m and the distance of FF from NF instruments was ca. 6 m.
Figure 2Schematic model of the spraying process. The spray chamber is assumed to be symmetric in leaking and mixing of pollutants at the conveyer belt inlet and outlet.
Parametrization of the work environment and tasks.
| Work Environment (Same for All Tasks) | ||
|---|---|---|
| Parameter | Value | Justification |
| Room volume, | Linear range: | The room volume was 1470 m3, which was assumed to vary according to the storing conditions from 1200 to 1470 m3. |
| General ventilation air exchange rate, | Linear range: | The room was naturally ventilated and by the LEV volume flow of 55.7 m3/min. Natural ventilation rate was not measured and it depends on climate and environmental. The natural ventilation was assumed to follow a triangular distribution with mode 2 1/h, minimum 0.5 1/h and maximum 8 1/h. The LEV increases the room ventilation rate by 2 1/h when turned on. |
| Flow rate between the spray chamber and NF, | Constant: | The LEV incoming and outgoing flow rates are in balance. |
| NF volume, | Triangular distribution with: | The virtual NF volume was set as a cube covering the NF sources and instrument inlets ( |
| Air mixing flow rate between NF and FF, | Lognormal distribution with: | The NF volume is ventilated by a random air speed that enters the NF volume from one-half of the free surface area and exits the other one-half [ |
Figure 3Example from a simulated test cycle (Test 1). Colored areas show the spraying times (red), pause between spray repetitions (blue), and the break for preparing a new test (green). Test cycle starts from the first spraying and ends to the start of next test. Blue line shows how test average concentration is calculated over the whole test cycle.
Materials, process parameters, particle number, mass concentrations, and emission rates in different tests. Test times are given in Table S1, Supplementary Material S1, and parametrization of individual tests for emission rate simulation are shown in Table S5.1, Supplementary Material S1.
| Test No. | Material | No. of Nozzles | Substrate | Emission Rate | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total | NP | ||||||
| 1 | TiO2N, 1.0 wt.% | 1 | PMMA | 6060 | 35.6 | 1.3 | 0.57 |
| 2 | TiO2N, 1.0 wt.% | 2 | PMMA | 8370 | 59.8 | 2.0 | 0.88 |
| 3 | TiO2N, 1.0 wt.% | 4 | PMMA | 3810 | 202.6 | 5.9 | 2.60 |
| 4 | TiO2N, 1.0 wt.% | 1 | TEXTILE | 520 | 25.1 | 0.9 | 0.40 |
| 5 | TiO2N, 1.0 wt.% | 2 | TEXTILE | 3040 | 49.5 | 1.6 | 0.70 |
| 6 | TiO2N, 1.0 wt.% | 4 | TEXTILE | 6670 | 181.5 | 4.5 | 1.98 |
| 1 to 6 | TiO2N, 1.0 wt.% | Varying | Varying | 4740 | 92.4 | - | - |
| 7 | AgHEC, 0.01 wt.% | 1 | TEXTILE | 38 | -4.9a | N/A | N/A |
| 8 | AgHEC, 0.01 wt.% | 2 | TEXTILE | 3400 | 17.9 | 0.8 | 0.009 |
| 9 | AgHEC, 0.05 wt.% | 1 | TEXTILE | 650 | 31.5 | 1.3 | 0.014 |
| 10 | AgHEC, 0.05 wt.% | 2 | TEXTILE | 2420 | 52.4 | 1.9 | 0.021 |
| 11 | AgHEC, 0.1 wt.% | 1 | TEXTILE | 1890 | 53.2 | 2.2 | 0.024 |
| 12 | AgHEC, 0.1 wt.% | 2 | TEXTILE | 3710 | 71.3 | 2.6 | 0.029 |
| 7 to 12 | AgHEC, varying | Varying | TEXTILE | 2020 | 36.9 | - | - |
Figure 4Particle number concentration measured by OPCs in the NF position (blue line) and FF (red line) for TiO2N suspension on the left and AgHEC suspension on the right.
Figure 5Process particle number size and mass size distributions for (A) TiO2N and (B) Ag experiments.
Figure 6Simulated random day mass concentrations for TiO2N experiment at (A) NF and (B) FF and for AgHEC experiment (C) NF and (D) FF.
Predicted total and NP exposure estimates in RWC during an 8-h work shift with two 3-h continuous spraying processes. Simulations were performed with Table 1 parametrization using precautionary emission rate with linear range as ≤ G ≤ . Weighted 95th percentile exposure was calculated as 10% of NF concentration 95th percentile and 90% of FF concentration 95th percentile. According to the ICP-MS analysis, total exposure levels during TiO2N and AgHEC spraying processes contains 44% and 1.1% TiO2 and Ag, respectively.
| Test No. | Emission Rate Range | NF 95th Percentile, [μg/m3] | FF 95th Percentile *, [μg/m3] | Weighted 95th Percentile Exposure, [μg/m3] | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total | NP | Total | NP | Total | NP | ||
| 1 | 1.3 to 2.6 | 466 | 205 | 44 | 19.4 | 86 | 38 |
| 2 | 2.0 to 4.0 | 710 | 312 | 68 | 29.9 | 132 | 58 |
| 3 | 5.9 to 11.8 | 2099 | 924 | 198 | 87.1 | 388 | 171 |
| 4 | 0.9 to 1.8 | 320 | 141 | 30 | 13.2 | 59 | 26 |
| 5 | 1.6 to 3.2 | 567 | 249 | 54 | 23.8 | 105 | 46 |
| 6 | 4.5 to 9.0 | 1601 | 704 | 152 | 66.9 | 297 | 131 |
| 7 | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| 8 | 0.8 to 1.6 | 287 | 3.2 | 26 | 0.3 | 52 | 0.6 |
| 9 | 1.3 to 2.6 | 462 | 5.1 | 60 | 0.7 | 100 | 1.2 |
| 10 | 1.9 to 3.8 | 676 | 7.4 | 64 | 0.7 | 125 | 1.5 |
| 11 | 2.2 to 4.4 | 787 | 8.7 | 74 | 0.8 | 145 | 1.8 |
| 12 | 2.6 to 5.2 | 961 | 10.6 | 88 | 1.0 | 175 | 2.1 |
* The FF concentration is doubled to estimate the NF2 concentrations dispersed to FF.