Bloise Andrea, Parisi Francesco, La Russa Mauro Francesco, Apollaro Carmine, Godbert Nicolas, Aiello Iolinda, Giorno Eugenia, Croce Alessandro, Cagna Laura, López Ana Jesús, Ramil Alberto, Pereira Dolores
Department of Biology, Ecology and Earth Sciences, University of Calabria, 87036, Rende, CS, Italy.
University Museum System - SiMU, Mineralogy and Petrography Section, University of Calabria, 87036, Rende, CS, Italy.
Heliyon. 2024 Oct 22;10(21):e39624. doi: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2024.e39624. eCollection 2024 Nov 15.
Health risks are often overlooked when the short-term consequences are not immediately apparent. During restoration work, cleaning actions can generate particles that pose health risks to workers through inhalation. This is particularly true in the case of asbestos fibres that might be spread out from the laser cleaning of buildings or heritage artifacts made of stone, such as serpentinite and other ultramafic rocks, that have a high probability of containing asbestos (e.g., chrysotile, tremolite asbestos, actinolite asbestos). To show workers the importance of wearing proper protection to prevent health injuries, several serpentinite samples, ascertained to contain asbestos minerals by specific investigations, have been laser ablated using ad hoc modified equipment in order to collocate a HEPA filter prone to collect all dust emitted during ablation. The powder deposited on the surface of these filters after laser ablation was analyzed, by Powder X -ray Diffraction (PXRD), Transmission Electron Microscopy combined with Energy Dispersive Spectroscopy (TEM/EDS), micro-Raman spectroscopy (μ-Raman) and Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR/ATR). The results confirmed the presence of asbestos fibres during the laser ablation of rocks containing Naturally Occurring Asbestos (NOA), emphasizing the importance of wearing appropriate personal protective equipment (PPE) during these procedures. Noteworthy, approximately 33 % of the analyzed fibres met the WHO criteria in size for respirable fibres. Furthermore, through our experiments, we also demonstrated that using tools that integrate filters into working tools would definitively further decrease the risk of fibres inhalation to workers.
当短期后果不立即显现时,健康风险往往会被忽视。在修复工作中,清洁行动会产生颗粒,工人吸入这些颗粒会对健康构成风险。对于石棉纤维来说尤其如此,在对由蛇纹岩和其他超镁铁岩等石材制成的建筑物或文物进行激光清洁时,石棉纤维可能会扩散开来,而这些石材很可能含有石棉(如温石棉、透闪石石棉、阳起石石棉)。为了向工人展示佩戴适当防护装备以防止健康伤害的重要性,通过特定调查确定含有石棉矿物的几个蛇纹岩样品,已使用专门改装的设备进行激光烧蚀,以便配置一个高效空气过滤器来收集烧蚀过程中释放的所有灰尘。激光烧蚀后沉积在这些过滤器表面的粉末,通过粉末X射线衍射(PXRD)、透射电子显微镜结合能谱分析(TEM/EDS)、显微拉曼光谱(μ-Raman)和傅里叶变换红外光谱(FTIR/ATR)进行了分析。结果证实,在对含有天然存在石棉(NOA)的岩石进行激光烧蚀过程中存在石棉纤维,强调了在这些操作过程中佩戴适当个人防护装备(PPE)的重要性。值得注意的是,大约33%的分析纤维在尺寸上符合世界卫生组织可吸入纤维的标准。此外,通过我们的实验,我们还证明,将过滤器集成到工作工具中的工具肯定会进一步降低工人吸入纤维的风险。