Elemental carbon - An efficient method to measure occupational exposure from materials in the graphene family
Journal article, 2024

Graphene is a 2D-material with many useful properties such as flexibility, elasticity, and conductivity among others. Graphene could therefore become a material used in many occupational fields in the future, which can give rise to occupational exposure. Today, exposure is unknown, due to the lack of efficient measuring techniques for occupational exposure to graphene. Readily available screening techniques for air sampling and -analysis are either nonspecific or nonquantitative. Quantifying materials from the broad graphene family by an easy-to-use method is important for the large-scale industrial application of graphene, especially when for the safety of working environment. Graphene consists primarily of elemental carbon, and the present study evaluates the organic carbon/elemental carbon (OC/EC)-technique for exposure assessment. The purpose of this work is to evaluate the OC/EC analysis technique as an efficient and easy-to-use method for quantification of occupational exposure to graphene. Methods that can identify graphene would be preferable for screening, but they are time consuming and semi-quantitative and therefore not suited for quantitative work environment assessments. The OC/EC-technique is a thermal optical analysis (TOA), that quantitively determines the amount of and distinguishes between two different types of carbon, organic and elemental. The technique is standardised, well-established and among other things used for diesel exposure measurements (ref standard). OC/EC could therefore be a feasible measuring technique to quantitively determine occupational exposure to graphene. The present evaluation of the technique provides an analytical method that works quantitatively for graphene, graphene oxide and reduced graphene oxide. Interestingly, the TOA technique makes it possible to distinguish between the three graphene forms used in this study. The technique was tested in an industrial setting and the outcome suggests that the technique is an efficient monitoring technique to be used in combination with characterisation techniques like for example Raman spectroscopy, scanning electron microscopy and atomic force microscopy.

Elemental carbon

Risk assessment

Occupational health

Exposure measurement

Graphene

Thermal optical analysis

Author

Tobias Storsjö

Sahlgrenska University Hospital

University of Gothenburg

Håkan Tinnerberg

University of Gothenburg

Sahlgrenska University Hospital

Jinhua Sun

Chalmers, Industrial and Materials Science, Materials and manufacture

Ruiqi Chen

Chalmers, Industrial and Materials Science, Materials and manufacture

Sahlgrenska University Hospital

Anne Farbrot

University of Gothenburg

Sahlgrenska University Hospital

NanoImpact

24520748 (eISSN)

Vol. 33 100499

Subject Categories

Production Engineering, Human Work Science and Ergonomics

Materials Chemistry

Condensed Matter Physics

DOI

10.1016/j.impact.2024.100499

More information

Latest update

3/15/2024