Understanding Dust
When people talk about dust, they are generally referring to small, dry, solid particles that slowly settle under their own weight. And small means up to 100πm (0.1mm) diameter, though some give a smaller upper limit.
A measure used in environmental measurements is to represent the maximum particle size as PMn, where n is the size in πm. PM2.5 is the typical size of car exhaust particles, PM10 dust and pollen, and PM15 smoke particles from an open fire.
Terminal Velocity and Aerodynamic Diameter
Heavy lead particles will settle more quickly than lightweight lithium carbonate, for example. The lead particles will have a higher maximum speed at which they can settle, or terminal velocity. To correct for this, the concept of aerodynamic diameter was introduced. The aerodynamic diameter of a particle is the diameter of a particle with a density of 1 g/cm3 that has the same terminal velocity as the particle we're looking at. If our particles are close to spherical, the aerodynamic diameter varies with the density. To put this into perspective, the table below compares water (assumed solid), lithium carbonate and lead, giving the density, terminal velocity and aerodynamic diameter of a 10πm diameter spherical particle.
Material | g/cm3 | Vt cm/s | Vt in/s | Aerodynamic dia. |
Water | 1.00 | 4.5 | 1.8 | 10 |
Lithium carbonate | 2.11 | 6.5 | 2.6 | 21 |
Lead | 11.34 | 15.2 | 6.0 | 113 |
It is the aerodynamic diameter that has been found to best determine how far particles penetrate the respiratory system, as well as how long they take to settle in air.
The terminal velocity, Vt, determines whether something is dust or not. Whilst 100πm particles may be airborne very briefly, 50πm particles have a Vt of about 7cm/sec, so settle quickly, and a 1πm particles has a Vt of about 0.03mm/sec, so its movement is determined more by air currents than by gravity.
Fibres
The long, thin shape of fibres can cause specific health problems. For health purposes, fibres have a diameter less than 3πm, a length greater than 5πm, and a length:width ratio greater than 3.
<HR>Licence
Tim Thornton Ceramics Technical by Tim Thornton is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
Permissions beyond the scope of this license may be available at https://tim-thornton.com/tikiwiki/tiki-index.php?page=Licence.
If you re-use any material from this web site, you must include an attribution statement as described in the licence, and state if the work has been altered.
You may release work that modifies or builds upon this work only under the same licence (or a compatable one, as defined in the licence).
This licence does not permit you to use this work for commercial purposes, i.e. for commercial advantage or monetary gain. If you wish to use the work in this way, please contact us to discuss it. You will need our prior permission and approval to do this.
Whilst we aim to ensure that all material is accurate at the time of publication, we do not accept responsibility for decisions based on information we make available. No content of this site may be taken to be legal or medical advice.
Please bear in mind that materials on the website are the most up to date versions, but items you have downloaded in the past may not be. The materials are updated from time to time. We recommend that you use the latest versions by referring to those published on our website.
Exclusions
Images β Images are not available for re use under the OGL because in most cases copyright is held by a third party. The Council does not grant anyone any rights to re use images.
Use of logos β The use of Tim Thorntonβs logos on any document or in association with any information, signifies that the document or information has been prepared or approved by him. The logos are to be used only when reproducing materials unaltered from the web site, to show their original source. If you wish to use the logo in any other way, please contact us first to obtain permission.
Third party intellectual property/copyright β We do not have the legal authority to grant permission to re use documents where legal rights are owned by third parties.
Applications for re-use
If you wish to make a specific application to re use information which does not conform with the CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 licence terms, please contact us to ask permission and for details of what, if any, additional conditions and/or charges may apply. Your application should be in writing, specifying your name and address and, identifying the information source you want to re-use and the purpose for re-use.
Disclaimer
Whilst every care has been taken in the compilation of this website, and every attempt made to present up-to-date and accurate information, we cannot guarantee that inaccuracies will not occur. We will not be held responsible for any loss, damage or inconvenience caused as a result of any inaccuracy or error within these pages.
Links from our site may lead to pages maintained by other organisations. These are provided purely for your convenience, and do not imply that we endorse or support those organisations, the information on their pages, or their products or services in any way. Additionally, no responsibility is assumed by us for the contents of its pages.