Return
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Due
to the number of reports, the following
are the categories we present them.
(Note: these reports were cited on Toxline
at Toxnet in April 2005) |
Fluoride
(all reports except Canada) |
Fluoride:
CANADA |
Fluoride
in the
Nuclear Industry |
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Note:
many of the
Canadian communities
cited in these reports
border the US. |
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Note:
this is a selected
list of reports. |
NTIS
Reports can be ordered by: phone at 1-800-553-NTIS (U.S.
customers); (703)605-6000 (other countries); fax at (703)605-6900;
and email at orders@ntis.gov. NTIS is located at 5285 Port
Royal Road, Springfield, VA, 22161, USA.
|
Order
Number
Source
Number |
Date
Published / Title / Author & Affiliation / Sponsor Agency |
Abstract
/Keywords |
NTIS/PB82-157629
186p |
1975.
An
Occupational Health Study of the Prevalence of Chronic Respiratory
Disease in Potroom Workers in the Northwest Aluminum Reduction
Industry
Authors:
Discher DP
Breitenstein BD Jr
Washington
Univ., Seattle. Dept. of Environmental Health.
Supporting
Agency: National Inst. for Occupational
Safety and Health, Cincinnati, OH. |
An occupational
health prevalence study of chronic respiratory disease in 457
male aluminum potroom workers is undertaken. The tests consist
of an interviewer administered questionnaire, forced spirometry,
closing volume determination, chest x-ray, sputum cytology,
serum alpha-1 antitrypsin, serum trypsin inhibitory capacity,
blood pressure, and urine and serum fluoride.
The prevalence of respiratory disease is 4.9% in the aluminum
workers and 5.3% in the controls. The prevalence ratios are
examined for workers using different processes, for potroom
exposure history, and current employment status. No significant
differences are observed. The aluminum workers have more abnormalities
in closing volume measurements and more mild atypia of the sputum.
Errata sheet inserted. |
NTIS/PB82-147596
Also available
in set of 19 reports PC E99, PB82-147539.
33p |
1975.
Industrial
Hygiene Chemistry Course. Instructor Manual: Lesson Number
5
Authors:
Pepler RD
Brainin PA
King EA
Dunlap
and Associates, Inc.,
Darien, CT.
Supporting
Agency: National Inst. for Occupational
Safety and Health, Rockville, MD. |
Instructor
manual for a one week 'Industrial Hygiene Chemistry' course,
designed to give program graduates expertise in environmental
sampling and analysis. Lesson 5 covers the operation and calibration
of a fluoride ion selective electrode system for the purpose
of quantitating the amount of fluoride collected in midget impingers.
Sections are devoted to demonstration of a sampling train for
fluoride and hydrogen fluoride in the air, synthesis of aqueous
fluoride standards, preparation of reference samples for analysis,
measurement of standards and samples, time response of the fluoride
electrode, and statistical treatment and interpretation of data. |
NTIS/DE92000531
90p |
1975.
Biological
effects data: Fluoride and sulfur dioxide. Final
report, 1 November 1973-30 April 1975.
Authors:
McMechan KJ
Holton RL
Ulbricht RJ
Morgan JB
Oregon
State Univ., Corvallis. School of Oceanography. |
The Alumax
Pacific Aluminum Corporation has proposed construction of an
aluminum reduction facility near Youngs Bay at Warrenton, Oregon.
This report comprises one part of the final report to Alumax
on a research project entitled, ''Physical, Chemical and Biological
Studies of Youngs Bay.'' It presents data pertaining to the
potential biological effects of fluoride and sulfur dioxide,
two potentially hazardous plant-stack emissions, on selected
aquatic species of the area. Companion volumes provide a description
of the physical characteristics the geochemistry, and the aquatic
animals present in Youngs Bay and adjacent ecosystems. An introductory
volume provides general information and maps of the area, and
summarizes the conclusions of all four studies. The
data from the two phases of the experimental program are included
in this report: lethal studies on the effects of selected levels
of fluoride and sulfur dioxide on the survival rate of eleven
Youngs Bay faunal species from four phyla, and s [abstract
truncated] |
NTIS/PB82-104464
9p |
1975.
Walk-through
Survey of Agrico Chemical Company
Author:
Cassady ME
National
Inst. for Occupational Safety and Health, Cincinnati, OH.
Div. of Field Studies and Clinical Investigations. |
The Agrico
Chemical Company (SIC-2879) of Pierce Chemical Works in Pierce,
Florida, was surveyed from May 12 to 15, 1975, for inclusion
in a comprehensive field study of wet chemical fertilizer processing
facilities in Central Florida. The company employed over 12,000
workers and contracted a clinic to provide preemployment physical
examinations and emergency care. First aid was administered
by certified personnel and an accident prevention training program,
a full time safety engineer, and protective equipment were provided.
During the manufacture of wet chemical
fertilizer, potentail hazardous exposure to sulfuric-acid
(7664939) mists, phosphoric-acid (7664382) mists, fluorides,
trace metals, radiation, and dust particles were present. The
author recommends further study of this facility. |
NTIS/PB82-103276
13p |
1975.
Walkthrough
Survey of W. R. Grace Chemical Company
Author:
Cassady ME
National
Inst. for Occupational Safety and Health, Cincinnati, OH.
Div. of Field Studies and Clinical Investigations. |
The W.R.
Grace and Company (SIC-2879) in Bartow, Florida was surveyed
from May 12 to 15, 1975, for inclusion in a comprehensive study.
The company employed 925 workers and provided medical facilities,
a full time day shift nurse, and certified first aid personnel
during night and week end shifts. The facility also provided
two physicians for 2 hours a week, pre-employment examinations,
and safety training programs. Potential exposures to asbestos
(1332214), sulfur-dioxide (7446095), sulfuric-acid (7664939)
mists, vanadium-pentoxide (1314621), excess dust, phosphoric-acid
(7664382) mists, fluorides, ammonia
(7664417), and uranium (7440611) existed. The author recommends
further study at this facility to quantify worker exposures.
Industrywide study |
NTIS
PB REPORT (PB-254 517)
41 PP |
1975.
MUTAGENIC
EVALUATION OF COMPOUND FDA 75-7, 007681-49-4, SODIUM FLUORIDE
Authors:
LITTON BIONETICS I
|
Test Category:
GENE MUTATIONS
Specific Test/Endpoint: AMES TEST
Test Category: EFFECTS ON CHROMOSOMES
Specific Test/Endpoint: GENE CONVERSION-TRP
Test Category: EFFECTS ON CHROMOSOMES
Specific Test/Endpoint: GENE CONVERSION-ADE
Test Category: MISCELLANEOUS CATEGORY
Specific Test/Endpoint: ACTIVATION-SPECIES
Test Category: MISCELLANEOUS CATEGORY
Specific Test/Endpoint: ACTIVATION-TISSUES |
NTIS/PB89-195887
12p |
1975.
Industrial Hygiene Survey of Agrico Chemical Company, Pierce
Chemical Works, Pierce, Florida, June 22-26, 1975.
Author:
Cassady ME
National
Inst. for Occupational Safety and Health, Cincinnati, OH.
Div. of Surveillance, Hazard Evaluations and Field Studies. |
An industrial
hygiene survey was conducted at the Agrico Chemical Company,
Pierce, Florida, June 22-26, 1975 to collect environmental data
on exposure of personnel to sulfuric acid, phosphoric acid,
chromium, uranium, fluorides, and
radiation during the cleaning of the phosphoric acid reactor
vessels. The process of phosphate fertilizer manufacturing is
described, and information is given on the medical, safety and
industrial hygiene program at this facility. Concentrations
of fluoride, phosphoric acid, cadmium dust, chromium, canadium
dust, and sulfuric acid were all below the legal standards.
Recommendations are made for improving the safety of
the tank cleaning procedure. Agrico's facility is not suitable
for epidemiological study because the latency period is too
short and also the medical and personnel records were not adequate
to perform a retrospective mortality study. Data on uranium
and radiation exposure will be included in a separate report. |
NTIS
PB REPORT (PB-238 313)
12p |
1974.
DRINKING
WATER ADDITIVES: PHYSICAL GROWTH AND BEHAVIORAL DEVELOPMENT
OF MICE RECEIVING CHLORINE AND FLUORINE
Authors:
WERBOFF J
LEWIS RA
COURNOYER DE |
Test
Object: MAMMAL, MOUSE
Name
of Agent (CAS RN):
FLUORIDE ( 16984-48-8 )
FLUORIDE DEFICIENCY
Assay
Method:
VIABILITY, FERTILITY AND MORTALITY
GROWTH
BEHAVIOR AND PSYCHOLOGIC PROCESSES
ABNORMALITIES (NOT SPECIFIED) |
NTIS/PB88-237573
315p |
1974.
NIOSH (National
Institute for Occupational Safety and Health) Manual of Analytical
Methods (1974 Edition),
Authors:
Crable JV
Taylor DG
National
Inst. for Occupational Safety and Health, Cincinnati, OH.
Div. of Labs. and Criteria Development. |
Analytical
methods were presented for determining about 135 chemicals in
the atmosphere, in the workplace, and in biological materials.
Specifically, methods were given for determining
lead (7439921), mercury (7439976), antimony (7440360), arsenic
(7440382), and fluoride (16984-48-8) in
urine; lead and mercury in blood; nitrogen-dioxide (10102440),
carbon-monoxide (630080), cyanide (57125), acrolein (107028),
beryllium (7440417), formaldehyde (50000), organic solvents,
hydrogen-sulfide (7783064), arsenic, 2,4-toluenediisocyanate
(584849), sulfur-dioxide (7446095), p,p'-diphenylmethanediisocyanate
(101688), vinyl-chloride (75014), cadmium (7440439), chromium
(7440473), ozone (10028156), lead, parathion (56382), oil mists,
aromatic amines, chromic-acid (1333820) mist, fluoride,
hydrogen-fluoride (7664-39-3), and mercury in air; [abstract
truncated] |
NTIS/02170212
54p |
1973.
Industrial
Hygiene Survey at the Intalco Aluminum Company.
Author:
Larsen LB
National
Inst. for Occupational Safety and Health, Salt Lake City,
UT. Western Area Occupational Health Lab. |
See also
PB96-115464.
The purpose of the survey was to determine exposure levels to
coal tar pitch volatiles, fluoride,
and other potential health hazards. The information obtained
will be used by the Division of Field Studies and Clinical Investigations
as part of a broader study of the potential health hazards of
various air contaminants in industry. Such studies will provide
useful information for development of criteria for recommended
standards documents for various toxic materials. |
|
1973.
Industrial Hygiene Survey of the Reynolds Metals, Jones Mill
Aluminum Reduction Plant
Author:
Shuler PJ
National
Inst. for Occupational Safety and Health, Cincinnati, OH.
Div. of Field Studies and Clinical Investigations. |
Worker
exposures to petroleum pitch volatiles, total and respirable
dust, fluorides, carbon-monoxide
(630080), and sulfur-dioxide (7446095) were surveyed from March
19 to 23, 1973, at the Reynolds Metals Jones Mill Aluminum Reduction
facility (SIC-3341) in Malvern, Arkansas. The company employed
about 750 blue and 175 white collar workers, a part time physician
and a full time nurse. Preemployment and periodic medical examinations
were provided. Respirators and other safety equipment were furnished.
General and local ventilation was used throughout the facility.
Although analytical problems occurred, exposures to benzene
soluble materials exceeded the OSHA standard of 0.2 milligrams
per cubic meter (mg/cu m) at all job sites. Dust exposures exceeded
the OHSA standard of l5mg/cu m at only one job site.
Concentrations of fluorides, carbon-monoxide, and sulfur-dioxide
were below respective OSHA standards of
2.5mg/cu m, 50 parts per million (ppm), and 5 ppm. Noise
levels exceeded the 90 decibel stan [abstract truncated] |
NTIS/PB82-110008
50p |
1973.
Industrial Hygiene Survey, Ormet Corporation Aluminum Facilities,
Hannibal, Ohio
Author:
Johnson WM
National
Inst. for Occupational Safety and Health, Cincinnati, OH.
Div. of Field Studies and Clinical Investigations. |
Worker
exposures to total and respirable dust, coal tar pitch volatiles,
fluorides, carbon-monoxide (630080),
and sulfur-dioxide (7446095) were surveyed on December 11, 1972,
at Ormet Corporation Aluminum (SIC-3341) facilities in Hannibal,
Ohio. The company employed about 1,800 blue and 325 white collar
workers. A full time physician was maintained on site, and preemployment
and voluntary periodic examinations were provided. All workers
were required to wear safety glasses and shoes, and carbon workers
also used respirators. Housekeeping in the carbon area was not
satisfactory. Local exhaust ventilation was used in the potrooms
and carbon area. Only one worker was exposed to dust concentrations
in excess of the OSHA standard of 15 milligrams per cubic meter
(mg/cu m). Analytic problems occurred during benzene soluble
material sampling; however, concentrations in the carbon area
probably exceeded the 0.2mg/cu m standard. All samples for fluorides,
carbon-monoxide, and sulfur-dioxide were below re [abstract
truncated] |
NTIS/PB81-224735
64p |
1973.
Industrial Hygiene Survey: Reynolds
Metals Listerhill Reduction Plant, Sheffield, Alabama,
February 12-16, 1973
Author:
Shuler PJ
National
Inst. for Occupational Safety and Health,
Cincinnati, OH. Div. of Field Studies and Clinical Investigations. |
Worker
exposures to dust, coal tar pitch volatiles, fluorides, carbon-monoxide
(630080), sulfur-dioxide (7446095), hydrogen-fluoride
(7664-39-3) and ammonia (7664417) were surveyed at Reynolds
Metals (SIC-3334) in Sheffield, Alabama from February 12 to
16, 1973. The factory employed 1100 persons, a medical director
and 6 nurses. Pre-employment examinations were given and the
factory had industrial hygiene and safety programs and committees.
Personal and stationary samples were collected for total dust
and coal tar pitch volatiles, fluorides, carbon-monoxide, sulfur-dioxide
and ammonia. Concentrations of total airborne dust, the benzene
soluble fraction of coal tar pitch volatiles, particulate fluorides,
gaseous fluorides, sulfur-dioxide,
hydrogen-fluoride, ammonia, carbon-monoxide
and noise ranged from 1.7 to 61.8 milligrams per cubic meter
(mg/cu m), from 1.1 to 60.0mg/cu m, from 0.014 to 0.173mg/cu
m, from 0.021 to 0.95mg/cu m, from 1 to 2 parts per million
(ppm), not detected, from 12 to 50ppm, [abstract truncated]
|
NTIS/PB82-216144
55p |
1973.
Report of Industrial Hygiene Surveys Conducted during Fiscal
Year 1973 in Six Aluminum Plants Located in the Northwestern
United States
National
Inst. for Occupational Safety and Health, Salt Lake City,
UT. Western Area Occupational Health Lab. |
Worker
exposures to coal-tar-pitch (65996932) volatiles and other hazards
were surveyed at six aluminum (7429905) factories in the northwestern
United States during 1973. Air samples
were analyzed for benzene (71432) soluble materials,
total dust, carbon-monoxide (630080), sulfur-dioxide (7446095),
hydrogen-fluoride (7664-39-3), and
total fluoride (7782-41-4).
Urine samples from potline workers were
analyzed for fluoride. Heat stress and noise measurements
also were taken. The author recommends an epidemiologic study
of aluminum workers. Better ventilation systems, work practices,
and respirator use programs also are suggested. Industrywide
study. |
NTIS/PB88-250170
26p |
1973.
Industrial Hygiene Survey at the Kaiser Aluminum Company,
Tacoma, Washington.
Author:
Larsen LB
National
Inst. for Occupational Safety and Health, Cincinnati, OH. |
Worker
exposures to coal
tar pitch volatiles, fluorides,
carbon-monoxide, and sulfur-dioxide were surveyed on May 3-6,
1973, at Kaiser Aluminum in Tacoma, Washington. The number of
employees was not reported. Total particulate concentrations
ranged from 0.1 to 21.7 milligrams per cubic meter (mguM), while
the concentration of benzene soluble materials ranged from 0.1
to 1.4mg/CuM. Total fluoride concentrations
were 0.1 to 0.9mg/CuM. Carbon-monoxide concentrations
ranged from below 50 parts per million, and sulfur-dioxide was
undetectable. The authors note that compliance with legal exposure
standards should be used on samples collected by the company
and the government agency responsible for compliance enforcement.
Industrywide study, |
NTIS/PB81-229940
20p |
1972.
Industrial Hygiene Survey of Aluminum Company of America Facilities
Author:
Shuler PJ
National
Inst. for Occupational Safety and Health, Cincinnati, OH.
Div. of Field Studies and Clinical Investigations. |
Worker
exposures to coal tar pitch volatiles, total dust, total
airborne fluoride and carbon-monoxide (630080) were
surveyed at the Aluminum Company of America (SIC-3295) in Alcoa,
Tennessee from September 11 to 15, 1972. Personal samples
of the benzene soluble fraction of coal tar pitch volatiles
and total airborne fraction were taken from workers. General
air samples for particulate and gaseous fluorides and detector
tube samples of carbon-monoxide concentrations were collected.
Total
dust concentrations ranged from 0.1 to 77.7 milligrams per cubic
meter (mg/cu m) and exceeded the Threshold Limit Value (TLV)
of 10mg/cu m for inert nuisance dust.
Concentrations of benzene soluble fractions ranged from 0 to
63.4mg/cu m, which were well over the TLV of 0.2mg/cu m. Total
airborne fluoride samples ranged from 0.10 to 1.23mg/cu m, and
were within the TLV of 2.5 mg/cu m. Concentrations of
carbon-monoxide ranged from less than 5 to 90 parts per million
(ppm) which were within the OSHA standard, except [abstract
truncated] |
NTIS/PB81-229908
64p |
1972.
Walk Through Industrial Hygiene Survey of Aluminum Company
of America Facilities
Authors:
Donaldson HM
Parnes W
Shuler PJ
Murrey S Jr
National
Inst. for Occupational Safety and Health, Cincinnati, OH. |
A preliminary
walk-through survey was conducted at the Aluminum Company of
America (SIC-3334) facilities in Tennessee on August 29, 1972.
The company employed approximately 6,000 workers. The survey
indicated a potential for exposure to coal tar pitch (65996932),
carbon dust (7440440), fluorides,
carbon-monoxide (630080), noise and heat. These exposures were
most severe in the south building of the facility where alumina
was reduced to aluminum in both prebaked and Soderberg cells
and at auxiliary operations where carbon anodes and cathodes
were produced. The authors recommend additional investigation,
including analysis of approximately 75 air samples. Prepared
in cooperation with Tennessee Dept. of Public Health, Nashville. |
NTIS/PB82-112863
24p |
1972.
Industrial Hygiene Survey at the Martin-Marietta Company,
The Dalles, Oregon
Authors:
Larsen LB
Rivera RO
National
Inst. for Occupational Safety and Health,
Salt Lake City, UT. Western Area Occupational Health Lab. |
Worker
exposures to coal tar pitch volatiles, fluorides, and heat were
surveyed from July 10 to 14, 1972, at Martin Marietta Aluminum
Company (SIC-3341) in the Dalles, Oregon. The number of employees
at the company was not specified. All airborne fluoride concentrations
were below 1.4 milligrams per cubic meter (mg/cu m) and all
urinary fluoride concentrations were below 8 milligrams per
liter. Several samples for benzene soluble material exceeded
the threshold limit value of 0.2mg/cu m. Average wet bulb globe
temperatures ranged from 77.9 to 84.6 degrees F. No exposure
standards were included for fluoride or heat. The authors conclude
that workers were exposed to significant amounts of coal tar
pitch volatiles. They note that compliance with legal exposure
standards should be determined from samples collected by the
company and the government agency responsible for compliance
enforcement. Industrywide study [abstract truncated] |
NTIS/PB82-109992
29p |
1971.
Report of Industrial Hygiene Survey, Anaconda Aluminum Company,
Columbia Falls, Montana
Author:
Larsen LB
National
Inst. for Occupational Safety and Health, Cincinnati, OH. |
The results
of airborne contaminant measurements taken at the Anaconda Aluminum
Company (SIC-3341) in Columbia Falls, Montana, on October 4
to 8, 1971, are tabulated. Concentrations of benzene soluble
materials in area and personal samples are presented, along
with total particulate measurements. Fluoride
concentrations in air and in urine samples from the workers
are included, and noise level measurements at selected
sites are provided. Industrywide study |
NTIS
PB203-465
12 pages |
1971.
Guides For Short-Term Exposures Of The Public To Air Pollutants.
III. Guide For Gaseous Hydrogen Fluoride
Committee
on Toxicology, National Academy of Sciences,
Washington, D.C.,
Report
No. APTD-0765,
16 references |
Exposure
to hydrogen-fluoride (7664393) is reviewed. Volcanoes are the
only natural source of hydrogen-fluoride but it is often released
as an industrial effluent. Pathological
effects noted in animals begin with irritation of mucous membranes
and localized respiratory tissue damage, progressing with continued
exposure to death from respiratory distress and cardiac arrest.
The mean lethal concentrations are given for several
species. Industrial accidents have provided information about
human toxicity of the gas and its liquid phase. Plants
are even more readily damaged by hydrogen-fluoride than are
animals. Atmospheric concentrations of hydrogen-fluoride are
most likely to reach hazardous limits down wind of industrial
effluent stacks. Recommendations for the short term public
limit of hydrogen-fluoride are for concentrations not to exceed
5 milligrams per cubic meter (mg/m3) of air for up to 60 minutes
of exposure or a 5 hour a day, a 3 or 4 day a month limit of
1mg/m3 or an equivalent of 1 part per million (ppm). The recommended
public emergency limit, which allows for temporary discomfort
but no residual damage, is 10 ppm for 10 minutes or 5 ppm for
30 or 60 minutes. |
|
|
|
NTIS/02370043
20p |
1964.
Environmental
Monitoring Summary for Paducah Plant for 1962 and 1963.
Author:
Baker RC
Union
Carbide Nuclear Co., Paducah, KY.
Sponsored
by Department of Energy, Washington,
DC. |
The
Paducah Plant is a government-owned gaseous diffusion plant
operated by Union Carbide Corporation, Nuclear Division, for
the Atomic Energy Commission. In addition to the uranium hexafluoride
in the isotope separation cascade, large
quantities of uranium fluorides and oxides are processed in
the feed manufacturing plant and in the uranium metal foundry.
Significant quantities of hexavalent chromium are used each
day as a corrosion inhibitor in the recirculating water of the
plant cooling system. Therefore, uranium,
fluorides, and hexavalent chromium are of primary interest in
the environmental monitoring program of the Paducah Plant. Other
factors routinely checked are pH, beta activity, and background
gamma radiation. Air and water are sampled continuously in the
vicinity of the plant, and grab samples of Ohio River water
and vegetation samples are collected monthly. |
NTIS/DE87006849
Paper
copy only, copy does not permit microfiche production.
15p |
1964.
Endocrine
and Metabolic Studies Utilizing Radioisotopes and Labeled
Hormones: Annual Report.
Author:
Talmage RV
Rice
Univ., Houston, TX.
Supporting
Agency: Department of Energy,
Washington, DC. |
This document
describes research conducted from July 1960 to July 1961 on
the use of radioisotopes and labeled hormones in endocrine and
metabolic studies. By measuring levels of C sup 14 -labeled
proline in the femurs of rats, the author demonstrated that
removal of the parathyroid glands slowed removal of calcium
in bones. Preliminary studies demonstrated
an inverse relationship between the level of fluorine in drinking
water and the number of bone cells in the femurs of rats. The
effects of x-radiation on the thyroid gland and on adjacent
tissues were determined by measuring the levels of sup 131 I
in the thyroid following exposure. Enzymatically controlled
processes were distinguished from physicochemical controlled
process by studying the effect of sup 131 I on the thyroid glands
of frogs. Attempts to transplant parathyroid tissue onto the
surface of bone were not definitive and will have to be modified.
1 fig. |
NTIS/03090024
8p |
1964.
Safety
Engineering in Working with Beryllium.
Author:
Yukhim IY
Joint
Intelligence Objectives Agency, Washington, DC. |
Trans.
of Metallovedenive i Termicheskaya Obrabotka Metallov (Physical
Metallury and Heat Treatment of Metals), (Russia), n11, p39-41,
Nov 1964.
The safety measures used when handling
beryllium and its compounds, especially the soluble ones (fluorides,
oxyfluorides, chlorides, sulfides, acetates, etc.), are
determined by their toxicity. Although the soluble compounds
of beryllium are more toxic to man, one must not underestimate
the danger presented by beryllium and its insoluble compounds
after penetrating into the respiratory organs in the form of
finely dispersed aerosols. The maximum permissible concentration
of beryllium and its compounds has been set in the USSR at 0.001
mg/m3. |
NTIS/PB89-122907
35p |
1958.
Industrial
Hygiene Survey of the Phosphate Industry
in Polk County, Florida, May 28, 1957.
National
Inst. for Occupational Safety and Health, Cincinnati, OH.
Industrywide Studies Branch.
Florida State Board of Health, Miami. |
Worker
exposure to dust, free silica, and fluoride concentrations were
determined at facilities of the phosphate industry
upon a request from the President of the International Chemical
Workers' Union to the Surgeon General of the Public Health Service.
Partial medical records were maintained and all employees received
preemployment physicals. The dust in the dry mill area was well
under 5 percent in free silica content; fluoride
concentrations of airborne dust at storage and shipping operations
in this area at times considerably exceeded the American Conference
of Government Industrial Hygienists threshold limit value (TLV)
of 2.5 milligrams per cubic meter. Over half of the atmospheric
fluoride concentrations at a chemical facility exceeded the
TLV. The authors recommended that environmental and medical
studies be conducted in the phosphate industry to determine
the extent and magnitude of potential health hazards. The studies
should include air sampling, routine urine fluoride analyses
on wor [abstract truncated] |
NTIS/AD-046
674/8
Distribution
limitation now removed.
NOTE:
Only 35mm microfilm is available. No microfiche.
10p |
1954.
Chemical
Investigations of Fluorine Compounds as Fungicides
Authos:
FINGER G.
REED F.
Illinois
State Geological Survey, Urbana. |
Keywords:
Fluorides
Fungicides
Organic compounds |
NTIS/DE95013616
96p |
1950.
University
of Rochester Atomic Energy Project quarterly report, April
1, 1950--June 30, 1950.
Author:
Blair HA
Rochester
Univ., NY. Atomic Energy Project.
Sponsored
by Department of Energy, Washington,
DC. |
This quarterly
progress report gives an overview of the University of Rochester
Atomic Energy Project for April 1, 1950 thru June 30, 1950.
Sections included are entitled (1) Biological Effects of External
Radiation (X-rays and gamma rays), (2) Biological Effects of
External Radiation (Infra-red and ultraviolet), (3) Biological
effects of radioactive materials (polonium, radon, thoron, and
miscellaneous project materials), (4) Uranium, (5) Beryllium,
(7) thorium, (8) fluoride, (9)
zirconium, (10) special materials, (11) Isotopes, (12) Outside
services, (12) Project health, (13) Health physics, (14) Special
Clinical Service, and (15) Instrumentation (Spectroscopy, electron
microscopy, x-ray and nuclear radiation detectors, x-ray diffraction,
and electronics). PROGRESS REPT. |
NTIS/DE90016769
Paper
copy only, copy does not permit microfiche production.
21p |
1949.
Report on visit to University of California, Chemistry Division,
Berkeley, California and attendance at American Chemical Society
symposium on atmosphere contamination and purification, San
Francisco, California, March 28-April 1, 1949.
Hanford
Works, Richland, WA. |
This paper
is a trip report dated May 9, l949 about a trip by W. Singlevich
of Hanford Reservation to the University of California at Berkeley.
Among the topics covered are: the Garden glove box; atmospheric
contamination; measuring air pollution; insecticidal
and fertilizer fluorides; measuring sulfur in the atmosphere;
and deposition of aerosol particles from moving gas streams.
2 figs. (FSD) Declassified 31 Aug 1990. Sponsored by Department
of Energy, Washington, DC. |
NTIS/AD-A322-371/6
6p |
1949.
Inhalation
Toxicity of Sodium Acid Sulfate Mist at 75 MG3 in Animals.
Authors:
Sprague GF
Doran E
Scott JK
Stokinger HE
Technical
Information Service Extension (AEC), Oak Ridge, TN. |
Because
the current literature contains reports that throw doubt on
the toxicity of beryllium per Se and point
instead to the putative toxicity of the acidic ions of its salts,
especially sulfate and fluoride, an inhalation study
of sodium acid sulfate mist was performed to determine whether
the sulfate ion had a toxicity comparable to that of beryllium
sulfate. Accordingly, an inhalation experiment was performed
in which the conditions of exposure duplicated those in which
beryllium sulfate had been used as the toxic agent except that
in the present study, sodium acid sulfate solution, with a pit
of 1.7, had been substituted for the beryllium salt solution.
Twenty guinea pigs and 10 rats were exposed daily for more than
2 weeks to 75 mg/m3 of the acid sulfate salt. This treatment
produced no general weight loss in either species. In one rat
and 2 guinea pigs that died from causes apparently unrelated
to the exposure, however, some weight loss occurred. No lesions
were observed in any animal tha [abstract truncated] |
NTIS/DE95013631
22p |
1943.
Toxicity of X material.
Author:
Ferry JL
Department
of Energy, Washington,
DC. |
This
report addresses toxicity (largely chemical) of Manhattan
Project materials from the point of worker protection. Known
chemical toxicities of X material (uranium), nitrous fumes,
fluorine, vanadium, magnesium, and lime are described
followed by safe exposure levels, symptoms of exposure, and
treatment recommendations. The report closes with an overview
of general policy in a question and answer format.
Keywords:
Fluorides
Toxicity
Manhattan Project
Nitrous Acid
Radiation Protection
Uranium
Vanadium |
|