Cohen H J, Borak J, Hall T, Sirianni G, Chemerynski S
University of New Haven, 300 Orange Avenue, West Haven, CT 06516, USA.
AIHA J (Fairfax, Va). 2002 Sep-Oct;63(5):651-8. doi: 10.1080/15428110208984753.
A study was initiated to examine worker exposures in seven underground nonmetal mines and to examine the precision of the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) 5040 sampling and analytical method for diesel exhaust that has recently been adopted for compliance monitoring by the Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA). Approximately 1000 air samples using cyclones were taken on workers and in areas throughout the mines. Results indicated that worker exposures were consistently above the MSHA final limit of 160 micrograms/m3 (time-weighted average; TWA) for total carbon as determined by the NIOSH 5040 method and greater than the proposed American Conference of Governmental Industrial Hygienists TLV limit of 20 micrograms/m3 (TWA) for elemental carbon. A number of difficulties were documented when sampling for diesel exhaust using organic carbon: high and variable blank values from filters, a high variability (+/- 20%) from duplicate punches from the same sampling filter, a consistent positive interference (+26%) when open-faced monitors were sampled side-by-side with cyclones, poor correlation (r 2 = 0.38) to elemental carbon levels, and an interference from limestone that could not be adequately corrected by acid-washing of filters. The sampling and analytical precision (relative standard deviation) was approximately 11% for elemental carbon, 17% for organic carbon, and 11% for total carbon. An hypothesis is presented and supported with data that gaseous organic carbon constituents of diesel exhaust adsorb onto not only the submicron elemental carbon particles found in diesel exhaust, but also mining ore dusts. Such mining dusts are mostly nonrespirable and should not be considered equivalent to submicron diesel particulates in their potential for adverse pulmonary effects. It is recommended that size-selective sampling be employed, rather than open-faced monitoring, when using the NIOSH 5040 method.
开展了一项研究,以检测7座地下非金属矿山中的工人接触情况,并检测美国国家职业安全与健康研究所(NIOSH)5040柴油废气采样与分析方法的精确性,该方法最近已被美国矿山安全与健康管理局(MSHA)采用,用于合规监测。使用旋风分离器在工人身上以及矿山各处采集了约1000份空气样本。结果表明,按照NIOSH 5040方法测定,工人接触的总碳量一直高于MSHA规定的160微克/立方米(时间加权平均值;TWA)的最终限值,且高于美国政府工业卫生学家会议提议的20微克/立方米(TWA)的元素碳TLV限值。在使用有机碳对柴油废气进行采样时,记录了一些困难:过滤器的空白值高且变化不定,来自同一采样过滤器的重复穿孔样本的变异性高(±20%),当开放式监测仪与旋风分离器并排采样时存在一致的正干扰(+26%),与元素碳水平的相关性较差(r 2 = 0.38),以及石灰石的干扰无法通过过滤器酸洗得到充分校正。元素碳的采样与分析精度(相对标准偏差)约为11%,有机碳为17%,总碳为11%。本文提出了一个假设,并提供数据支持,即柴油废气中的气态有机碳成分不仅吸附在柴油废气中发现的亚微米级元素碳颗粒上,还吸附在矿尘上。此类矿尘大多不可吸入,在潜在的肺部不良影响方面不应被视为等同于亚微米级柴油颗粒。建议在使用NIOSH 5040方法时采用尺寸选择性采样,而非开放式监测。