Airborne Levels of Lung Carcinogens at an Ascon Manufacturing Site

Abstract We assessed the airborne concentrations of the dust (both total and respirable), quartz, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, and elemental carbon in an ascon manufacturing environment to determine the exposure to operators and the likelihood of developing occupational respiratory disease. The...

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Main Authors: Kyeongmin Lee, Sungwon Choi, Miyeon Kim, Dongwoo Song, Ki-Youn Kim
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Springer 2020-04-01
Series:Aerosol and Air Quality Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.4209/aaqr.2019.09.0456
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author Kyeongmin Lee
Sungwon Choi
Miyeon Kim
Dongwoo Song
Ki-Youn Kim
author_facet Kyeongmin Lee
Sungwon Choi
Miyeon Kim
Dongwoo Song
Ki-Youn Kim
author_sort Kyeongmin Lee
collection DOAJ
description Abstract We assessed the airborne concentrations of the dust (both total and respirable), quartz, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, and elemental carbon in an ascon manufacturing environment to determine the exposure to operators and the likelihood of developing occupational respiratory disease. The Ascon production process is divided into four stages, namely, feeding, drying, mixing, and loading. During the feeding stage, the aggregate is transferred via hoppers to underground conveyors. The drying process removes moisture from the aggregate and maintains the required temperature for combining the aggregate, asphalt, and additives into ascon during the mixing stage. Finally, the ascon is disgorged from an outlet on the mixing machine and loaded onto dump trucks. The airborne concentrations of the total dust, respirable dust, and quartz measured at Hopper 1 and Hopper 6 were 8.540, 1.536, and 0.125 mg m−3, and 10.092, 3.989, and 0.331 mg m−3, respectively. The amounts of respirable dust and quartz by the vibrating screen totaled 12.362 and 1.645 mg m−3, respectively, and that of elemental carbon near a dryer burner equaled 0.001 mg m−3. The levels of the total dust, respirable dust, and quartz at the mixer outlet and in the dump truck zone were observed to be 0.685, 0.265, and 0.011 mg m−3, and 0.419, 0.036, and 0.011 mg m−3, respectively. Of the measured substances, only naphthalene was found at concentrations significantly lower than the permissible exposure limit (10 ppm), reaching only 0.274, 0.138, 0.192, and 0.237 ppm for the dryer burner, dump truck zone, dump truck waiting zone, and operational room, respectively. The conveyors on the ground, vibratory sieve, Bunker C oil tank, and mixer also exhibited very low concentrations of naphthalene—0.074, 0.088, 0.080, and 0.074 ppm, respectively. Relatively low levels of personal exposure to the total and the respirable dust (0.027 and 0.013 mg m−3) were measured during the operational tasks. However, operators were exposed to higher levels of respirable dust and quartz, 4.260 and 0.548 mg m−3, while cleaning the underground conveyors. Based our results, we conclude that whereas PAHs are emitted at very low concentrations during ascon production, quartz-containing aggregate dust is released in large quantities. This study presents the first environmental evaluation at an ascon production facility in terms of substances that cause lung cancer.
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spelling doaj-art-a7b0ddbcd3b94de3baeaf00ccddc04762025-02-09T12:18:54ZengSpringerAerosol and Air Quality Research1680-85842071-14092020-04-012061411141710.4209/aaqr.2019.09.0456Airborne Levels of Lung Carcinogens at an Ascon Manufacturing SiteKyeongmin Lee0Sungwon Choi1Miyeon Kim2Dongwoo Song3Ki-Youn Kim4Institute of Occupation and Environment, Korea Workers’ Compensation and Welfare ServiceInstitute of Occupation and Environment, Korea Workers’ Compensation and Welfare ServiceInstitute of Occupation and Environment, Korea Workers’ Compensation and Welfare ServiceDivision of Convergence Education, Halla UniversityDepartment of Safety Engineering, Seoul National University of Science and TechnologyAbstract We assessed the airborne concentrations of the dust (both total and respirable), quartz, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, and elemental carbon in an ascon manufacturing environment to determine the exposure to operators and the likelihood of developing occupational respiratory disease. The Ascon production process is divided into four stages, namely, feeding, drying, mixing, and loading. During the feeding stage, the aggregate is transferred via hoppers to underground conveyors. The drying process removes moisture from the aggregate and maintains the required temperature for combining the aggregate, asphalt, and additives into ascon during the mixing stage. Finally, the ascon is disgorged from an outlet on the mixing machine and loaded onto dump trucks. The airborne concentrations of the total dust, respirable dust, and quartz measured at Hopper 1 and Hopper 6 were 8.540, 1.536, and 0.125 mg m−3, and 10.092, 3.989, and 0.331 mg m−3, respectively. The amounts of respirable dust and quartz by the vibrating screen totaled 12.362 and 1.645 mg m−3, respectively, and that of elemental carbon near a dryer burner equaled 0.001 mg m−3. The levels of the total dust, respirable dust, and quartz at the mixer outlet and in the dump truck zone were observed to be 0.685, 0.265, and 0.011 mg m−3, and 0.419, 0.036, and 0.011 mg m−3, respectively. Of the measured substances, only naphthalene was found at concentrations significantly lower than the permissible exposure limit (10 ppm), reaching only 0.274, 0.138, 0.192, and 0.237 ppm for the dryer burner, dump truck zone, dump truck waiting zone, and operational room, respectively. The conveyors on the ground, vibratory sieve, Bunker C oil tank, and mixer also exhibited very low concentrations of naphthalene—0.074, 0.088, 0.080, and 0.074 ppm, respectively. Relatively low levels of personal exposure to the total and the respirable dust (0.027 and 0.013 mg m−3) were measured during the operational tasks. However, operators were exposed to higher levels of respirable dust and quartz, 4.260 and 0.548 mg m−3, while cleaning the underground conveyors. Based our results, we conclude that whereas PAHs are emitted at very low concentrations during ascon production, quartz-containing aggregate dust is released in large quantities. This study presents the first environmental evaluation at an ascon production facility in terms of substances that cause lung cancer.https://doi.org/10.4209/aaqr.2019.09.0456Asphalt concrete manufacturePAHsQuartz
spellingShingle Kyeongmin Lee
Sungwon Choi
Miyeon Kim
Dongwoo Song
Ki-Youn Kim
Airborne Levels of Lung Carcinogens at an Ascon Manufacturing Site
Aerosol and Air Quality Research
Asphalt concrete manufacture
PAHs
Quartz
title Airborne Levels of Lung Carcinogens at an Ascon Manufacturing Site
title_full Airborne Levels of Lung Carcinogens at an Ascon Manufacturing Site
title_fullStr Airborne Levels of Lung Carcinogens at an Ascon Manufacturing Site
title_full_unstemmed Airborne Levels of Lung Carcinogens at an Ascon Manufacturing Site
title_short Airborne Levels of Lung Carcinogens at an Ascon Manufacturing Site
title_sort airborne levels of lung carcinogens at an ascon manufacturing site
topic Asphalt concrete manufacture
PAHs
Quartz
url https://doi.org/10.4209/aaqr.2019.09.0456
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AT dongwoosong airbornelevelsoflungcarcinogensatanasconmanufacturingsite
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