Abstract
This study investigated personal exposures to methyl methacrylate (MMA) monomer during monomer production and use within the chemical manufacturing industry. The aim was to include multiple companies and sites to provide information regarding differences and similarities among exposure subgroups within the industry during the time period of 1998–2000. To this end, personal exposure data for MMA monomer from three chemical corporations was combined into a single data set. The data was stratified by sample type (full shift or short term), job classification (monomer production, monomer use, maintenance, distribution, and laboratory operations), company, and facility. Only classifications with three samples or more were included in the final data set, yielding 376 samples for analysis (334 full-shift and 42 short-term samples). Results compare well with previously published data on MMA monomer exposures. Although there was significant variability in several exposure subgroups (particularly among companies and facilities), MMA monomer use in the manufacture of other products resulted in the highest exposure distributions, with lower exposures associated with monomer production, maintenance, and distribution operations. The usefulness of these findings is related to the provision of information for discussion of current needs in the industry regarding data sampling, exposure assessment, and standards development.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The authors would like to thank the Methacrylate Producers Association, Inc. (MPA) and several of its member companies for allowing access and publication of exposure data from their operations.
Notes
A Job class codes: MP (monomer production), MU (monomer use), D (distribution), M (maintenance).
B Only classifications with three or more samples included.
C Sampling duration ≥360 min for all full-shift samples.
D Less than the LOD samples included in analyses as LOD/√2.
E The number of LOD samples was 119 out of 334 (35.6%).
A Job class codes: MP (monomer production), MU (monomer use), D (distribution), M (maintenance), L (laboratory).
B Only classifications with three or more samples included.
C Sampling duration minimum ≥1 min with maximum ≤30 min for all partial shift samples.
D Less than the LOD samples included in analyses as LOD/√2.
F Statistics not reported: more than 50% of samples less than the LOD.