The present study has 2 aims. First, the method of spectral reflectance was used to measure evaporation rates of thin (∼25-300 μm) films of neat liquid volatile organic chemicals exposed to a well-regulated wind speed u. Gas-phase evaporation mass transfer coefficient (k) measurements of 10 chemicals, 9 of which were measured at similar u, are predicted (slope of log-log data = 1.01; intercept = 0.08; R = 0.996) by a previously proposed mass transfer correlation. For one chemical, isoamyl alcohol, the dependence of k on u was measured, in support of the predicted exponent value of ½. Second, measured k of nicotine was used as an input in analytical models based on diffusion theory to estimate the absorbed fraction (F) of a small dose (5 μL/cm) applied to human epidermis in vitro. The measured F was 0.062 ± 0.023. Model-estimated values are 0.066 and 0.115. Spectral reflectance is a precise method of measuring k of liquid chemicals, and the data are well described by a simple gas-phase mass transfer coefficient. For nicotine under the single exposure condition measured herein, F is well-predicted from a theoretical model that requires knowledge of k, maximal dermal flux, and membrane lag time.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.xphs.2018.04.020 | DOI Listing |
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