Glass fiber dissolution in simulated lung fluid and measures needed to improve consistency and correspondence to in vivo dissolution

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Abstract

The dissolution of a range of glass fibers including commercial glass and mineral wools has been studied using a modification of Gamble's solution in a flow system at pH 7.4 and 37°C. Dissolution has been followed by weight loss, effluent analysis, and morphology change of fibers and bulk glass. Flow per glass surface area can strongly affect both dissolution rate and morphology due to the effect of the dissolution process on the fluid. Effluent pH is shown to be a guide for choice of optimum flow/area conditions. These conditions provide measurable concentrations of dissolved glass in the effluent while maintaining their concentrations below the point at which they significantly affect the dissolution process. SiO2 and Al2O3 vary widely in the extent to which they are involved in the leaching process, which removes alkalis, alkaline earths, and B2O3. This makes analysis of a single component in the effluent unsuitable as a means of comparing the dissolution rates of a wide range of compositions.

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Mattson, S. M. (1994). Glass fiber dissolution in simulated lung fluid and measures needed to improve consistency and correspondence to in vivo dissolution. In Environmental Health Perspectives (Vol. 102, pp. 87–90). Public Health Services, US Dept of Health and Human Services. https://doi.org/10.1289/ehp.94102s587

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