Microbiological air sampling was performed in one fiberboard factory and two chipboard factories located in south-eastern Poland. It was found that the levels of bacteria, fungi, dust and bacterial endotoxin in the air of examined facilities were high during initial stages of the production cycle (shredding of waste wood, storing of chips) and then sharply decreased during further stages of this cycle (forming and formatting of the boards). In the fiberboard factory, the concentration of airborne microorganisms at the initial stages of production cycle was 71.8-95.2 x 10(3) cfu/m3 and dropped in further stages to the level of 8.4-17.5 x 10(3) cfu/m3. Fungi (mostly Aspergillus fumigatus and Penicillium spp.) were prevailing microorganisms in the air of the fiberboard factory, forming 46.0-87.3% of the total airborne microflora. The concentrations of microorganisms in the air of the chipboard factories were significantly lower compared to the fiberboard factory (p<0.05). During initial stages of production cycle they were within the range of 12.9-101.5 x 10(3) cfu/m3, while during forming and formatting of boards within the range of 5.3-12.4 x 10(3) cfu/m3. On average, the most common microorganisms in the air of the chipboard factories were corynebacteria (mostly Arthrobacter spp. and Corynebacterium spp.) which formed 24.4-64.6% of the total microflora. The values of the respirable fraction of airborne microflora in the fiberboard and chipboard factories varied within a fairly wide range and were between 20.5-91.1%. Altogether, 38 species or genera of bacteria and 16 species or genera of fungi were identified in the air of examined factories, of which respectively 14 and 9 species or genera were reported as having allergenic and/or immunotoxic properties. The concentration of bacterial endotoxin in the air of examined factories was greatest, similarly to the concentration of microorganisms, during the initial stages of the production cycle: 103.1-1974.0 EU/m3 in the fiberboard factory, and 3.2-217.4 EU/m3 in chipboard factories. In conclusion, the workers of fiberboard and chipboard factories may be exposed during the initial stages of the production cycle (shredding of waste wood, storing of chips) to high levels of airborne microorganisms and endotoxin posing respiratory hazard.
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Chemosphere
October 2023
Department of Textile Engineering, Mehran University of Engineering and Technology, Jamshoro, 76062, Sindh, Pakistan.
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Department of Industrial Hygiene and Safety, Faculty of Public Health, Burapha University, Chonburi, Thailand.
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Laboratory of Wood Chemistry and Technology, Department of Forestry and Natural Environment, International Hellenic University, GR-661 00 Drama, Greece.
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March 2002
Department of Chemistry, University of Durham, South Road, Durham DH1 3LE, UK.
A format for a disposable screen-printed biosensor was investigated for monitoring formaldehyde. The screen-printed sensor format comprised a working electrode (WE) modified with platinised carbon, a new lipophilic tetrathiafulvalene-tetracyanoquinodimethane (TTF-TCNQ) salt as mediator, a plasticised polyurethane membrane (TECOFLEX SG80, PU) with anionic sites and the enzyme (formaldehyde dehydrogenase FOH) and co-factor (beta-NAD(+)). The new lipophilic TTF-TCNQ salt gave a smooth, robust electrode surface rather than microcrystalline deposits of the salt observed with TTF-TCNQ salts.
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