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Detection of Carbon Nanotubes in Indoor Workplaces Using Elemental Impurities Pat E Rasmussen, Mary-Luyza Avramescu, Innocent Jayawardene, and H. David Gardner Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.5b02578 • Publication Date (Web): 09 Oct 2015 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on October 10, 2015
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Detection of Carbon Nanotubes in Indoor Workplaces Using Elemental
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Impurities
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Pat E. Rasmussen1,2*, Mary-Luyza Avramescu1, Innocent Jayawardene1, and H.
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David Gardner1,2
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1. 2.
Environmental Health Science and Research Bureau, HECSB, Health Canada, 50 Colombine Driveway, Tunney’s Pasture 0803C, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, K1A 0K9 University of Ottawa, Earth Sciences Department, Ottawa, ON, Canada K1N 6N5
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*corresponding author: Pat E. Rasmussen; Environmental Health Science and Research
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Bureau, HECSB, Health Canada, 50 Colombine Driveway, Tunney’s Pasture 0803C,
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Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, K1A 0K9; phone: (613) 868-8609; fax: (613) 952-8133; email:
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[email protected] 22 23 24 25
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ABSTRACT
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This study investigated three area sampling approaches for using metal impurities in
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carbon nanotubes (CNTs) to identify CNT releases in workplace environments: air
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concentrations (µg/m3), surface loadings (µg/cm2), and passive deposition rates
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(µg/m2/hr). Correlations between metal impurities and CNTs were evaluated by
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collecting simultaneous co-located area samples for thermal-optical analysis (for CNTs)
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and ICP-MS analysis (for metals) in a CNT manufacturing facility. CNTs correlated
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strongly with Co (residual catalyst) and Ni (impurity) in floor surface loadings, and with
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Co in passive deposition samples. Interpretation of elemental ratios (Co/Fe) assisted in
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distinguishing amongst CNT and non-CNT sources of contamination. Stable isotopes of
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Pb impurities were useful for identifying aerosolized CNTs in the workplace environment
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of a downstream user, as CNTs from different manufacturers each had distinctive Pb
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isotope signatures. Pb isotopes were not useful for identifying CNT releases within a
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CNT manufacturing environment, however, because the CNT signature reflected the
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indoor background signature. CNT manufacturing companies and downstream users of
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CNTs will benefit from the availability of alternative and complementary strategies for
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identifying the presence/absence of CNTs in the workplace and for monitoring the
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effectiveness of control measures.
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INTRODUCTION
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Distinguishing releases of engineered nanomaterials from background aerosols (arising
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from natural sources or incidental sources such as welding fumes or vehicle exhaust) is a
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major challenge that must be addressed to improve assessments of risk associated with
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emerging nanotechnologies.1,2 Direct reading instruments used for monitoring airborne
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nanoparticles are non-specific and do not have the capacity to distinguish engineered
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nanomaterials from background aerosols.3-5 In the case of carbon nanotubes (CNTs),
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determination of elemental carbon is recommended6 for quantification of occupational
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exposures to CNTs (using NIOSH Method 5040 or an equivalent method). Difficulties
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arise in distinguishing CNTs where the background aerosol is also largely composed of
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elemental carbon (e.g., diesel soot), requiring additional off-line analytical techniques
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such as transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and scanning electron microscopy with
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energy dispersive X-Ray spectroscopy (SEM-EDX) to be used in combination with direct
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reading and elemental carbon approaches to verify the presence of CNTs in workplace
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environments.6-8
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Several studies have employed metal catalyst impurities (imbedded in CNTs during the
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manufacturing process) as an index or proxy for CNTs using inductively coupled plasma
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atomic emission spectroscopy (ICP-AES),9,10 inductively coupled plasma mass
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spectroscopy (ICP-MS),11-13 or emerging instrumental approaches.14-16 A survey of CNTs
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produced by different manufacturers indicated that most catalyst residues are transition
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metals, such as Fe, Ni, Mo, Y, Co and Cr, and that other unexpected impurity elements
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(including As, Gd, W, Yb, and Sm) also occur in CNTs due to large-scale production 3
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procedures, post fabrication and post-purification treatments.17 That survey, which used
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neutron activation analysis, found that metal impurities in CNTs contribute between 0.44
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and 3 wt%, even after purification.17 This important observation opens up the possibility
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of using metal impurities to detect CNT releases to the environment. For example,
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Schierz et al.13 used the catalyst elements Mo and Co to fingerprint CNT occurrence in
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sediment cores after a simulated spill into an outdoor wetland mesocosm. Olson et al.12
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used filter-based air sampling followed by ICP-MS analysis to quantify a variety of water
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soluble metals (Y, Ti, Fe, Cu, As, Zn, Cd, Pb, and Ag) in CNT materials that were
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aerosolized in a controlled environmental chamber, and reported concentrations similar to
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those observed in urban ambient PM2.5 samples on a mass per mass basis, with the
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exception of Y which was higher in the studied CNTs than in ambient air samples.
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Technologies to identify CNT releases are especially important for monitoring the
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effectiveness of control measures to reduce worker exposure across common process
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tasks.18 Maynard et al.9 used Fe and Ni catalyst impurities as a CNT index to investigate
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airborne and dermal exposures to SWCNT in production environments. Birch et al.5
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investigated spatial correlations of carbon nanofibers (CNFs) and Fe catalyst impurities in
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manufacturing facilities using air filter samples, and reported that the Fe catalyst was not
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a useful CNF proxy due to interferences from non-CNF sources of Fe in the facility.
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The present study investigates the potential usefulness of other CNT impurities (such as
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Co, Mo, Ni and Y) which are less prevalent than Fe in the background environment, for
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identifying the presence/absence of CNTs in the workplace and for monitoring the 4
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effectiveness of control measures. Several alternative sampling strategies are presented,
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as some approaches are more suited to certain workplaces, such as CNT production
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facilities versus research laboratory environments. The concept of using metal impurities
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to monitor CNTs in a production facility is evaluated by examining correlations between
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metals and CNTs in co-located surface wipe samples, passive deposition samples and air
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samples. As an alternative to filter-based air sampling methods, a wet electrostatic
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precipitation method is investigated in a laboratory environment for its capacity to
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capture transient airborne Pb isotopic signatures of aerosolized CNTs. As metal
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impurities in themselves present a potential health hazard, and some studies indicate that
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elemental carbon and metal particles together produce oxidative effects greater than
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either particle type alone,5,19 the alternative strategies presented in this study add breadth
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to existing sampling strategies used for CNT exposure and risk assessments.
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EXPERIMENTAL
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Reference Materials and Sampling Methods
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Two standard reference materials (SRMs) for CNTs were available with certified metal
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concentrations in the relevant range for evaluating metal impurity recoveries: NIST 2483
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Single Wall CNT (SWCNT; from National Institute of Standards and Technology,
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Gaithersburg, MD, USA), and NRC Certified Reference Material SWCNT-1 (from
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National Research Council, Canada). Additionally two non-SRM CNT test materials
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were obtained for laboratory experiments: SWCNT from Sigma-Aldrich Co. (Gillingham,
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UK no. 698695 MKBB3788) which has been characterized previously,11 and SWCNT 5
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research material (NRC Test) provided by National Research Council, Canada. Further
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characterization of the NRC SRM, Aldrich CNT, and NRC Test material using SEM and
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TEM is provided as Supporting Information (Table S-1 and Figures S-1 to S-4).
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In a research laboratory setting, aerosolized CNTs were collected using wet electrostatic
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precipitation under controlled environmental conditions detailed previously.20 An
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Aerosol-to-Liquid Particle Extraction System (ALPXS; Meinhard Glass Products,
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Golden, CO) was used to capture aerosolized particles of Aldrich CNT, NIST 2483 SRM,
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and NIST 1648a (Urban Particulate Matter) for stable Pb isotope determination using
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quadropole ICP-MS. The particulate matter was aerosolized using a mechanical shaker
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with an ALPXS sampling duration of 30 min (300 L/min flow rate).20 Background air
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was sampled using the ALPXS (2 hr duration) in two laboratory locations before
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aerosolization experiments were initiated.
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Area sampling was conducted in five areas of a CNT manufacturing environment: the
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vicinity of the reactor, the catalyst preparation area, an administrative office, the control
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room, and the packaging area. In the preliminary mapping survey, five surface wipe
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samples were collected from a variety of floor and unused shelf surfaces in each of the
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first three locations. GhostWipes (Environmental Express, Charleston, South Carolina,
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SC 4250; pre-moistened with deionized water in individually sealed packets) were used
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for wipe sampling in the preliminary mapping. GhostWipes, which are composed of
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polyvinyl alcohol copolymer, meet the ASTM E-1792 and OSHA Method ID-125G wipe
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sampling protocols, and have been used for monitoring lead and other metals.21 To 6
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determine surface loading (in µg/cm2), wipe samples were collected using a mechanical
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device designed by TNO (Utrecht, Netherlands) that systematically samples a surface
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area of 22 cm2 by moving a 9.6 cm2 disc of wipe material in a back-and-forth motion
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using consistent pressure.
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In the follow-up survey of the CNT manufacturing facility, duplicate samples were
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collected in each location: one for ICP-MS and the other for thermo-optical carbon
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determination. Filter-based area air samples were collected using cassette samplers
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loaded with quartz fiber filters (Whatman 25 mm, Cat No 1851-025) at all five locations
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within the facility (2 L/min flow rate; 4-6 hr sampling duration in work process sites; 8 hr
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in the administrative area used as background ). Co-located wipe samples (using 25 mm
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quartz fiber filters and 9.6 cm2 Ghost Wipe discs) were collected from the floor and from
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shelf surfaces not used by workers, at four out of the five air sampling locations (i.e. all
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but the control room). To determine deposition rates (in µg/cm2/hour), passive
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accumulation samples were collected by laying out a GhostWipe (15cm x 15cm) in a
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large pre-cleaned petri dish (for each sample, 2 consecutive wipes were exposed for a
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total of 40 h 15 min and combined for digestion and analysis) at each of the four locations
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within the facility where surface wipe samples were collected. The preliminary mapping
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was conducted during downtime (for metals only) and the follow-up sampling (for metals
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and CNTs) was conducted one month later while the facility was in production phase.
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Samples were shipped to Health Canada (Ottawa, Canada) for metal determination and to
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TNO (Utrecht, Netherlands) for carbon determination.
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Sample Preparation and Elemental Analysis
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A combined hot-block/microwave (HBMW) digestion method with nitric acid and
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hydrogen peroxide22 was used to extract metals from the air filter samples, wipe samples
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and deposition samples collected from the manufacturing site. Recoveries of 87% and
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110% respectively were obtained for Co and Mo in NIST 2483 combined with
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GhostWipes, as described previously.22 For extraction of the quartz filter samples, an
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additional washing step (with de-ionized water) was added at the end of the HBMW
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method, as advised by USEPA.23 A NexION 300s ICP-MS with Dual-channel Universal
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Cell (Perkin Elmer, Canada) equipped with a SC-Fast autosampler (Elemental Scientific,
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Omaha, NE), a high temperature apex-ST PFA MicroFlow nebulizer, cyclonic spray
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chamber and a PC3x chiller operated at 2oC, and a triple cone interface (nickel-platinum
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skimmer and sampler cones, and aluminium hyper cone) was operated in the standard
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mode for all elements except Fe for which reaction mode was used. A preliminary semi-
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quantitative scan of the digests identified Ge, In and Re as appropriate internal standards.
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A short ultrasonic digestion method24 with a strong acid mixture (HNO3-HF) was used
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for the preliminary mapping samples.
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ALPXS samples were preconcentrated using hot block evaporation, then digested using a
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nitric acid/ultrasonic bath digestion procedure described previously.20 Pb isotopic ratios
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were determined using an Elan DRC II-6100 Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass
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Spectrometer (ICP-MS; Perkin Elmer, Woodbridge, ON, Canada). For each run, the
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NIST 981 Common Lead Isotopic Standard (National Institute of Standards and
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Technology, Gaithersburg, MD, USA) was determined after every 5 samples for quality 8
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assurance (observed values for 3 reported isotopes in NIST 981 were within 0.3% of
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certified values).
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Sample pre-treatment for thermal-optical carbon analysis consisted of dissolving the
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GhostWipe sample in a 1:1 nitric acid/water mixture and filtering the dispersion onto a
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pre-fired (900 °C) quartz fiber filter with a vacuum filtration system, followed by rinsing
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with de-ionized water. A 1 cm2 sample of each quartz filter was analyzed for elemental
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carbon (EC) and organic carbon (OC) using a thermal/optical carbon monitor (Sunset
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Laboratory Inc., USA) according to NIOSH 5040.6 A modified IMPROVE protocol was
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used for the temperature and atmospheric gas settings.25 OC was removed from the filter
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in the temperature range of 120-550 °C in a non-oxidizing carrier gas (helium). EC was
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then removed in the temperature range of 550-920 °C in a mixture of helium and 2%
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oxygen (2% O2/He). The resulting CO2 was then converted to methane and detected by
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flame ionisation detection (FID). Correction for pyrolysis of OC to EC was carried out by
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measurement of light transmission. EC was categorized into EC1 (550 °C), EC2 (650 °C)
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and EC3 (920 °C) according to the oxidized temperature. The sum of EC2 and EC3 was
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used for a quantitative estimate of the CNT concentration. Doudrick et al26 showed that
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thermal analytical methods for measuring CNTs require customized optimization for
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different environmental matrices; therefore, the use of a single protocol for different
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matrices (filters and wipes) may affect CNT recoveries in one matrix relative to the other.
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Although this factor does not impact the trends reported in this study (due to consistent
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recoveries within each matrix type), future research is needed to optimize thermal carbon
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analyses for the various sampling substrates that may be used for CNT collection. 9
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Quality control
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High purity acids (SEASTAR Chemicals Inc., Sidney BC, UN2031, CAS 7697-37-2) and
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ultrapure Milli-Q water (18.2 MΩ cm) were used for preparation of samples and
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standards. High purity standard stock solutions (Delta Scientific Laboratory Products
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Ltd., Mississauga, ON) were used to prepare the calibration and internal standard
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solutions. To guard against sample contamination, powder-free nitrile gloves were worn
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and changed frequently (at least in every new sampling location, if not after every
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sample) and samples were double-bagged before shipment. The sampling matrices used
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in this study (GhostWipes and quartz fiber filters) contained variable concentrations of
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contaminant elements introduced during their manufacturing and packaging processes;
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therefore, 3-8 matrix blanks (filters or wipes as appropriate) were included in every
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analytical batch to enable the calculation of matrix blank corrections. See Supporting
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Information (Tables S-2 to S-4) for ICP-MS quality control details including LODs,
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reagent blanks and matrix blanks). Field blanks were collected by subjecting the sampling
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medium (wipe or filter) to all the same steps as a sample, minus the actual sample
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collection. Matrix blanks were subtracted from all samples and field blanks, but field
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blanks were examined separately and were not subtracted from samples.
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RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
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Selection of CNT impurities as candidate elemental tracers
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Determining whether elemental impurities in CNTs are likely to be useful as
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environmental tracers requires preliminary knowledge of concentrations of those
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elements in the surrounding environment arising from background sources (i.e. any
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natural or anthropogenic sources other than the CNTs being investigated).
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illustrated in Figure 1 which compares background elemental signatures (represented by
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global soil averages27) against those of two CNT standard reference materials (SRMs;
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Figure 1a) and two test CNT materials supplied without elemental concentration
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information (unknowns; Figure 1b), as is commonly experienced by downstream users of
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CNTs. Elemental concentrations in Figure 1 were determined using ICP-MS
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determinations of digested subsamples of all four CNT materials, three of which were
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also characterized using SEM and TEM (SI Table S-1 and Figures S-1 to S-4).
This is
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Identification of potential elemental tracers is enabled by the horizontal lines in Figure 1,
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each representing an order-of-magnitude increase in concentration (log scale). Co, Mo
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and Ni in the NRC SRM and Co and Mo in the NIST SRM (Figure 1a) emerge as
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potentially useful tracers, as their concentrations in the CNTs exceed global background
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by 2 to 3 orders of magnitude. With respect to the two unknowns (Figure 1b) Ni, Y and
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Co in the NRC Test material, and Ni and Y in the Aldrich material, emerge as likely
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candidates as they exceed global background by more than 2 orders of magnitude.
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Note that the reverse is true for Fe and Al: despite having elevated concentrations in all
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four CNTs (100-1000 µg/g; Figure 1), the global background averages for these elements
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are orders of magnitude higher (about 3.5% for Fe and 8% for Al27), making them less 11
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useful as potential CNT tracers. A recent study19 indicates that the above trends hold for
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CNTs that are significant in commercial applications: impurity concentrations (µg/g) tend
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to be higher for Ni (GM 816; GSD 15; max 11,757) than for Fe (GM 217; GSD 3.1; max
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2008) in 21 commercially relevant multi-wall CNTs (MWCNTs). Current usage of other
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metal catalysts is indicated by their maximum values (µg/g) for this set of MWCNTs (Co
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5656; Cu 5830; Mn 2236; Mo 1863) and for seven commercially relevant SWCNTs (Co
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3225; Cr 1931; Fe 1408; Mo 1442).19
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Preliminary mapping of a CNT manufacturing environment
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Ramachandran et al.28 recommended concentration mapping as a quantitative tool to
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investigate spatial and temporal variability and identify contaminant sources in
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nanotechnology workplaces, or as a pre-survey tool to determine optimal sampling
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locations for subsequent measurements. Although indoor environments may be relatively
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free of outdoor soil and dirt, contributions of metals from indoor sources can significantly
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interfere with the use of CNT metal impurities as tracers. Thus the first goal of the
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present study was to investigate background levels of alternative elemental tracers such
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as Co, Ni and Mo in a CNT manufacturing facility, by comparing surface loadings of the
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candidate elements in an administrative room remote from the CNT operations (as the
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reference indoor background site) and two work process sites (around the catalyst
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preparation area and around the reactor where the CNTs are produced). The catalyst used
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for CNT production in this facility was Co, with CNT concentrations of Co within the
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range reported for typical SWCNT and MWCNT products currently in commerce
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(