Fire at Notre Dame Cathedral and Lead Materials in the Environment

  • Date N
  • Sato A
  • Takeuchi K
  • et al.
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Abstract

This literature review deals with lead materials in fire and related environmental issues based on inorganic chemistry. In 2019, the Notre Dame Cathedral fire raised not only the issue of damage to historical building, but also the issue of the impact of lead materials on the environment as well as human health. Three months after the fire, French media reported that lead contamination had been detected in the area around the cathedral, with lead levels 500-800 times higher than the safety requirements. More than 200 tons of lead used in the roofs and spire melted in the fire. Besides this French fire case, chemical aspects of lead (element and compounds), usage of lead as building materials (Japanese castle, paint for a highway bridge, and protection against radioactive rays) on past architectural fires, energy materials (gasoline, lead-acid battery, and Perovskites solar cells in future) and their potential fire risk, and impact to human are also reviewed in this paper.

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Date, N., Sato, A., Takeuchi, K., Mori, T., Yokosuka, K., Ito, Y., … Akitsu, T. (2020). Fire at Notre Dame Cathedral and Lead Materials in the Environment. Fire Science and Technology, 39(1), 17–37. https://doi.org/10.3210/fst.39.17

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