Small Chamber Study Of Lead Exposures From Manual Soldering Of Microelectronics

Brent D. Kerger,Anne E. Loccisano, Russell Gerads, Matthew J. Glassman

HUMAN AND ECOLOGICAL RISK ASSESSMENT(2021)

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摘要
Airborne and surface Pb concentrations were measured inside a glovebox chamber with controlled inflow rate at 1.0 L/min of ultrapure air over a 4-hour period while an operator completed 1,680 solder connections using Sn63:Pb37 solder with rosin flux core. Chamber atmosphere showed released mean Pb mass of 0.0238 +/- 0.011 mu g and mean airborne concentration of 0.176 +/- 0.085 mu g/m(3). Of the total solder mass used in two trials, on average 4.65% was recovered from the tip cleaning sponge and 0.14% dropped onto the work surface, with a surface loading rate of 0.30-0.45 mu g/cm(2). The estimated fingertip surface area in contact with solder wire was 14.7 cm(2), with a measured average Pb mass of 14.9 mu g, and a corresponding dermal loading rate of 1.01 mu g/cm(2). The waste solder dross surface area determined from digital micrographs in each trial were 1.65 and 2.43 cm(2), with corresponding Pb density of 714 and 610 mg/cm(2) and >90% of the detected dross mass comprising particles >100 mu m in the widest dimension. Corresponding increases in blood Pb levels estimated using physiologically-based pharmacokinetic modeling were negligible compared with background. These findings demonstrate very low Pb emissions to air and surfaces during intensive manual microelectronic soldering activities.
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关键词
lead soldering, airborne lead emissions, dermal contact, fine metal particulates
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