Characteristics and aerosol size distributions of metal-containing paint particles at a spray-painting workplace
Abstract
The health effects of metal-containing paint-particles at various particle-size distributions on workers in a spray-painting workplace at an industrial ventilation equipment manufacturing plant. Samples were collected over 30 working days in 2014. Aerosol samples were collected for 8 h using the 10 impaction stages of a micro-orifice uniform deposit impactor. Metal-containing particles were analyzed using inductively coupled plasma with atomic emission spectroscopy (ICP-AES). Measurement results show that the particles with the highest mass concentrations were PM>18 (1043.3 ± 412.5 μg m−3). The mass ratios of PM10 to total PM ranged from 0.36 to 0.56. The submicron particles (PM1) and ultrafine particles (PM0.1) constituted 6.2% and 1.5% of the total PM mass, respectively. The most abundant metal elements in all particle sizes on all sampling days were Pb (55.1 ± 19.5 μg m−3) and Fe (42.1 ± 4.1 μg m−3). Significantly, the MMD of Cd, Ni, As and Cr of carcinogenic metals were in the range 0.4–2.1 μm (below respirable particle diameters), indicating that 50% carcinogenic metals could possibly be deposited in the non-ciliated gas-exchange regions of the lung. Most metal content contributed approximately 57.48–98.09% to the total PM content in submicron particles (PM1), except Pb. Cancer risks of carcinogenic metals (Cd, Ni and Cr) in PM10 for paint spraying process workers at the industrial ventilation equipment manufacturing plant nevertheless exceeded 10−6. In particular, the assessment of health risk of inhaled Cr in ultrafine particle (UFP) fractions was found to be higher than 10−6, indicating that a carcinogenic health effect existed in the spray-painting workplace.