Academic Journal
Main Category: Water - Air Quality / Agriculture
Also Included In: Public Health; Respiratory / Asthma
Article Date: 25 Jul 2013 - 7:00 PDT Current ratings for:
Could your 3D printer make you ill?
Commercially available desktop 3D printers emit potentially harmful nano-sized particles into indoor air, according to researchers at the Illinois Institute of Technology.
The researchers, who have published their work in the journal Atmospheric Environment, say inhaling a high amount of these particles has been associated with adverse health conditions, such as asthma and cardiorespiratory illnesses, and studies have linked elevated ultrafine particle (UFP) concentrations with increased hospital admissions for stroke.
For the study, the researchers measured the rates of UFPs emitted from desktop 3D printers inside a small enclosed 45 m3 office space. The UFP particles are small, nano-sized particles that are less than 100 nanometers in diameter.
Nine 3D printers were used to print small plastic figures over various time periods. The concentration measurements were used to estimate the UFP emission rates from the printers.
The results revealed high UFP rates from around 20 billion particles per minute from printers using a lower temperature PLA (polylactic acid) feedstock (printer fuel), to around 200 billion particles per minute for a 3D printer using a higher temperature ABS (acrylonitrile butadiene styrene) feedstock.
Small plastic frogs were printed to measure the emissions from the 3D printers
The researchers say that the rates the 3D printers emitted were similar to those emitted in other indoor activities such as using a gas or electric stove or burning scented candles.
"Regardless," the researchers note, "the desktop 3D printers measured herein can all be classified as 'high emitters' with UFP emission rates greater than 1010 particles per minute," according to criteria in a 2007 study analyzing particle emission characteristics of office printers.
They note that as well as the large differences in the emission rates between the PLA and ABS printers, there could also be differences in the levels of toxicity as a result of differences in the chemical compositions of the feedstocks.
The study points to previous research looking at toxic emissions from ABS processing, which has revealed toxic effects in mice and rats. But interestingly, PLA nanoparticles are known to be safe in humans and are widely used in drug treatments, the researchers say.
They conclude that the results suggest caution should be used when operating some commercially available 3D printers in unvented or inadequately filtered indoor environments, adding:
"More controlled experiments should be conducted to more fundamentally evaluate aerosol emissions from a wider arrange of desktop 3D printers and feedstocks."
Size-resolved and total (<100 nm) ultrafine particle (UFP) concentrations measured in the office space during the sampling campaign
Written by Honor Whiteman
Copyright: Medical News Today
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Ultrafine Particle Emissions from Desktop 3D Printers, published in the journal Atmospheric Environment, July 6, 2013
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posted by Ralph on 25 Jul 2013 at 9:25 am
If you open up windows to keep the particulates from building up, you will be fine. Of course, that's assuming the substances involved are not specifically toxic.
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