Selected synthetic organic fibres

Evaluates the risks to human health posed by occupational and environmental exposure to selected synthetic organic fibres. Fibres covered include carbon and graphite fibres, aramid fibres, and polyolefin fibres. Carbon and aramid fibres are used mainly in advanced composite materials to improve stre...

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Bibliographic Details
Institution:ETUI-European Trade Union Institute
Format: TEXT
Language:English
Published: Geneva 1993
WHO
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.labourline.org/KENTIKA-19205861124910230439-Selected-synthetic-organic-fib.htm
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collection Library items
description Evaluates the risks to human health posed by occupational and environmental exposure to selected synthetic organic fibres. Fibres covered include carbon and graphite fibres, aramid fibres, and polyolefin fibres. Carbon and aramid fibres are used mainly in advanced composite materials to improve strength, stiffness, durability, electrical conductivity, or heat resistance. Since these fibres improve properties without adding much weight, they are used primarily in the aerospace industry, for military purposes, and in the manufacture of sports equipment. Polyolefin fibres are used in carpet pile, upholstery, bedding, curtains, and other household textile applications. The largest use of polyolefin fabric in clothing is in disposable diapers and athletic socks. Basic information on chemical and physical properties and methods of production is followed by a review of data from studies of exposure in the occupational environment, where operations such as fibre forming, winding, chopping, weaving, cutting, and machining and composite formation release fibre dusts into the workplace. The most extensive chapter, focused on the results of toxicological studies in laboratory animals and in vitro test systems, reviews the many important methodological problems, including choice of exposure route, that make it difficult to assess effects and extrapolate findings to humans. Although data from human studies are limited, the report concludes that occupational exposure to these synthetic organic fibres may have adverse effects on the respiratory system. The report further concludes that the health risk associated with exposure in the general environment is likely to be very low.
format TEXT
id 19205861124910230439_c5d06a68be524ca6ba8309ce95fcac16
institution ETUI-European Trade Union Institute
is_hierarchy_id 19205861124910230439_c5d06a68be524ca6ba8309ce95fcac16
is_hierarchy_title Selected synthetic organic fibres
language English
physical 100 p.
Paper
publishDate 1993
publisher Geneva
WHO
spellingShingle animal experiments
carbon fibres
chemicals
health impact assessment
in vitro experiments
IPCS
man-made fibres
occurrence
risk assessment
sampling and analysis
uses
Selected synthetic organic fibres
title Selected synthetic organic fibres
topic animal experiments
carbon fibres
chemicals
health impact assessment
in vitro experiments
IPCS
man-made fibres
occurrence
risk assessment
sampling and analysis
uses
url https://www.labourline.org/KENTIKA-19205861124910230439-Selected-synthetic-organic-fib.htm