1. A Fiber Characterization of the Natural Zeolite, Mordenite: A Potential Inhalation Health Hazard
- Author
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Dale J. Stephenson, Charles I. Fairchild, Maxine E. Dakins, and Roy M. Buchan
- Subjects
Fiber type ,Inhalation ,Waste management ,Mineralogy ,Radioactive waste ,Pollution ,Natural (archaeology) ,Mordenite ,Health hazard ,Environmental Chemistry ,Environmental science ,General Materials Science ,A fibers ,Zeolite - Abstract
Interest in mordenite as an inhalation hazard arose when it was discovered that the mineral exists in the subsurface of Yucca Mountain, NV, the site of a federally proposed nuclear waste repository. During preliminary geologic investigations at Yucca Mountain, workers performing air coring (dry-drilling) operations were potentially exposed to aerosols of mordenite. Mordenite is also increasingly used in industrial applications, such as cation exchange, molecular absorbency, and reversible dehydration. Concern that the fibrous nature of mordenite may present an inhalation hazard is supported by the ''Stanton Hypothesis," which states that the carcinogenicity of any fiber type depends upon dimension and durability rather than physicochemical properties. To date, little scientific literature is available on the inhalation health hazards of mordenite. This study initiates research in this area. Mordenite specimens collected from different geologic localities were analyzed macroscopically and microscopically. ...
- Published
- 1999
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