Metals and Particulates Exposure from a Mobile E-Waste Shredding Truck: A Pilot Study

Author:

Ceballos Diana1ORCID,Zhou Michael2,Herrick Robert2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Environmental Health, Boston University School of Public Health, Boston, MA, USA

2. Department of Environmental Health, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA, USA

Abstract

Abstract The US electronics recycling industry has introduced a novel mobile electronic waste (e-waste) shredding truck service to address increasing needs for secure data destruction of e-waste. These trucks can shred small electronics with data security concerns at remote locations for a wide variety of clients. Shredding jobs usually involve hand-feeding electronic waste (e-waste) for 4–10 h day−1, 1–5 days. Shredding of e-waste has been documented as a source of high metal exposures, especially lead and cadmium. However, no studies have been done to assess exposures on mobile e-waste shredding trucks. We conducted a pilot cross-sectional exposure assessment on a mobile e-waste shredding truck performing a 65-min shredding job (truck back door open and no local exhaust ventilation) in the Greater Boston area in 2019. We collected area air and surface wipe samples for metals along with real-time particulate measurements from different locations. The highest metal air concentrations (e.g. 2.9 µg-lead m−3) were found next and 1.8 m away from the shredder operator inside the semi-trailer. Metal surface contamination was highest near the shredder (e.g. 1190 µg-lead 100 cm−2) and extended to other parts of the truck. Near the shredder, the concentration of ultrafine particles was up to 250 000 particles cm−3 and particulate matter 2.5 mm or less in diameter (PM2.5) was up to 171 µg m−3, and neither returned to background levels after 40 min of inactivity. A diesel-electric generator was used to power the shredder and could have contributed to some of the particulate emissions. We found that mobile e-waste shredding trucks are a source of metals and particulates emissions. We recommend the industry adopts better controls for shredding inside trucks, such as local exhaust ventilation with proper filtration and use of personal protective equipment, to protect workers’ health and the environment.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences

Harvard JPB Environmental Health Fellowship

Harvard Hoffman Program on Chemicals and Health

Harvard Education and Research Center

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

Reference26 articles.

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2. Metal exposures at three U.S. electronic scrap recycling facilities;Ceballos;J Occup Environ Hyg,2017

3. Evaluation of occupational exposures at an electronic scrap recycling facility;Ceballos,2014

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