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State/local amalgam separator/BMP programs US Navy separator/BMP program Regulated Medical Waste vs. Hazardous Waste con

State/local amalgam separator/BMP programs US Navy separator/BMP program Regulated Medical Waste vs. Hazardous Waste concerns US EPA Office of Solid Waste dental school initiative Dental chairside trap designs Hg vapor issues. 2. New York. Amalgam separators must be installed by May 2008

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State/local amalgam separator/BMP programs US Navy separator/BMP program Regulated Medical Waste vs. Hazardous Waste con

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  1. State/local amalgam separator/BMP programs • US Navy separator/BMP program • Regulated Medical Waste vs. Hazardous Waste concerns • US EPA Office of Solid Waste dental school initiative • Dental chairside trap designs • Hg vapor issues 2

  2. New York • Amalgam separators must be installed by May 2008 • All dental facilities that “apply, alter, maintain, remove, or dispose of amalgam” • Excludes orthodontists, periodontists, prosthodontists, and Oral Surgeons • Separators must be 99% efficient • Separator waste must be disposed of within one year 3

  3. New York • All dentists must recycle amalgam waste • Maintain written certification of recycling • Dentist must notify local sewer authority that separator is installed • New offices must install separators prior to opening • Amalgam waste cannot be disposed of in trash, medical waste containers, or sterilized in autoclaves • Pre-encapsulated amalgam only (elemental Hg banned) 4

  4. Milwaukee, Wisconsin • Milwaukee Metropolitan Sewerage District (MMSD) requiring separators to be installed by February 1, 2008 • MMSD serves 28 municipalities • 317 total amalgam using offices in district • Currently 184 amalgam using offices with separators installed (58%) • Point of contact: Tom Nowicki, (414) 225-2275 5

  5. Milwaukee, Wisconsin Data from Tom Nowicki, Milwaukee County Sewerage District 6

  6. Wisconsin Statewide • Separators and BMPs required in Dane County (Madison) by 12/31/2008 • Seven major Wisconsin municipalities will also require separator installations by 2008 (GLWQI – 1.3 ng/L) • Wisconsin Dental Association is cooperating with separator effort • Contact Randy Case of the Wisconsin DNR for more information (608) 267-7639 7

  7. Gurnee, Illinois NSSD • NSSD is 2nd largest POTW in Illinois • No discharge directly to Lake Michigan • Mandated Pretreatment systems at Naval Base, Great Lakes • Completed survey of all dentists in service area • Working towards a program requiring BMPs and/or separators in near future • Point of Contact: Sharon R. Thieszen (847) 623-6060 8

  8. Minneapolis/St. Paul Metro Area 7 Counties • Separators or permits required for all dental offices placing and/or removing amalgam • MCES Maintains a list of approved separators • 99% removal efficiency with ISO 11143 • Testing and certification • Works closely with Minnesota Dental Association • Point of Contact: Peter Berglund of MCES, (651) 602-4708 9

  9. Duluth, Minnesota • Voluntary effort organized by Tim Tuominen of the WLSSD • Installed separators in all dental offices serviced by WLSSD • Works with Northeast District Dental Society (MDA) • WWTP influent is down and effluent is approaching the GLWQI level of 1.3 ng/L • Point of Contact is Tim Tuominen (218) 740-4815 10

  10. Non-Great Lakes States/Areas • Connecticut (95%), Maine (95/98%, list of approved separators), New Hampshire, Vermont, Rhode Island (eastern half of state) • Massachusetts requires 98% ISO 11143 efficient separator or equivalent method acceptable to MassDEP • VT and CT include separators in BMPs and require dentists to implement BMPs • Washington requires installation of ISO 11143 separators statewide 11

  11. Non-Great Lakes States/Areas • New Jersey is working on a requirement for separators • Montana Draft Bill 1262 would require amalgam separators and recycling of amalgam waste • Warren Air Force Base, Cheyenne, Wyoming required to install amalgam separators in dental clinics 12

  12. Non-Great Lakes States/Areas • Wichita, Kansas requires ISO 11143 separators • San Francisco Bay area • East Bay Municipal Utility District • Contra Costa Central Sanitation District • Union Sanitary District • Palo Alto Sanitary District • Toronto (one of earliest requirements) • Montreal 13

  13. Navy is installing separators in all dental treatment facilities • US, overseas, and ships • Installing systems that remove both particulate and dissolved Hg • Also installing chairside filtration systems that remove particulate and protect downstream plumbing lines • Working on non-mercury filling materials 14

  14. Disposable filter elements are housed inside reusable chambers • Filter elements are made from spun polypropylene • 6 inch filter element has a vendor claimed surface area of ~2.2 square feet (depth filtration) • Cost of a disposable filter element is less than $2.00 a piece 15

  15. Baseline Hg levels without any chairside filtration system averaged 1,087.38 mg (n=50, SD=993.92) • Units are in mean mg ofHg per dental chair per day 16

  16. Calculated removal efficiencies = (B Hg – F Hg / B Hg) x 100; where B Hg is the baseline Hg level, F Hg is the amount of particulate Hg collected after the chairside filter) • Baseline Hg levels without any chairside filtration system averaged 1,087.38 mg (n=50, SD=993.92) 17

  17. The 0.5 m filter passed at 96.8% • The 15 m filter failed at 94.8% • Currently testing the 1.0 and 5.0 m filters with the ISO protocol • ISO 11143 protocol is currently up for revision to close the “loophole” of flow rate and other changes (The threshold for maximum testing will be 1 liter/minute, where there was no threshold before) 18

  18. Reusable filter chambers require periodic cleaning to remove debris • A disposable unit has been developed to address this issue 19

  19. Chairside filtration systems substantially reduce Hg emissions into wastewater Low cost and minimal maintenance 0.5 m filter passed ISO 11143 protocol Location at the chair protects downstream plumbing lines from amalgam debris Minimal impact on vacuum levels at the HVE tip 20

  20. In some locations amalgam waste is both a regulated medical waste (Potentially Infective Medical Waste, PIMW) and a hazardous waste • In Illinois teeth, contiguous bond and gum are excluded from PIMW classification • Some recyclers require a “certificate of disinfection” before they will accept dental waste • Medical waste is routinely incinerated or autoclaved which would release Hg to atmosphere 21

  21. EPA is seeking to partner with US Dental Schools to develop a curriculum based dental recycling program • Student dentists • Practicing dentists though CE • Gray Bag program (ANSI/ADA Specification 109) • Point of contact is David Carver, USEPA OSW (703) 308-8603 22

  22. Standard procedure to collect, store, and prepare amalgam waste for shipment to recyclers • Disinfecting of wastes (if required by recyclers) • Keep written records: mass, name and address or recycler, etc. • Wastes include extracted teeth with amalgam fillings 23

  23. Scrap amalgam • Contact • Non Contact • Used capsules • Chairside traps • Extracted teeth with amalgam fillings • Amalgam from amalgam separators and vacuum pump filters 24

  24. Landfills vs. Retorting Facilities • Need for the disinfection of amalgam waste? • Universal Waste Laws • Ease regulatory burdens • Promote proper recycling, treatment, or disposal • Provide for collection opportunities 25

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  26. Most dental chairs have built in chairside traps • While not originally designed to function as amalgam separators, chairside traps remove substantial amounts of amalgam waste • There is confusion in the literature concerning pore sizes of traps • This project used image analysis to obtain more accurate estimates of trap pore sizes from four selected chairside traps 27

  27. Uncovered type trap Covered trap Trap used in new ADEC Dental chairs 28

  28. Example of an inline chairside trap after 5 days of use 29

  29. SEM of amalgam waste from removal of amalgam restorations. Note that the particles have high aspect ratios. 30

  30. Table 1: Mean and Standard Deviations (SD) from Traps with Square Pores 1Feret’s Diameter is the greatest dimension between any two points along the boundary 2Aspect is the ratio of the longest dimensionto shortest dimension 31

  31. Table 2: Mean and Standard Deviations (SD)Trap with Round Pores – Trap 4 3 Roundness is a measure of how far the pore shape differs from a circle 32

  32. Trap 1 – DentalEZ 33

  33. Trap 2 – Pinnacle Products, Inc. 34

  34. Trap 3 – Pinnacle Products, Inc. 35

  35. Trap 4 – Parts Warehouse, Inc. 36

  36. All traps had at least one dimension greater than 700μm When traps are the only Hg abatement mechanism, our findings suggest greater potential for Hg emissions than was previously assumed Manufacturers have the opportunity to contribute to the reduction of environmental Hg contamination Covered traps help prevent waste amalgam from entering plumbing lines 37

  37. Recycling means that more amalgam waste is “stored” in dental treatment rooms • May result in Hg vapor levels exceeding human exposure limits • Another issue is Hg vapor levels in exhaust air from dental vacuum systems 38

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  39. APermissible Exposure Limit for Hg vapor is a time weighted average for an 8-hour workday and a 40-hour workweek. This is the legally enforceable limit for the workplace • BRecommended Exposure Limit for Hg vapor for up to a 10-hour workday and 40-hour workweek • CHg threshold limit value as a time weighted average for an 8-hour workday and a 40-hour workweek 40

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  41. We’ve surveyed a number of dental operatories • Hg vapor levels in breathing zone is well below OSHA/NIOSH/ACGIH exposure levels • Hg vapor levels inside recycling containers can exceed exposure levels • Care should be taken when opening containers 42

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  43. Mean for all three clinics and both methods was 51,684 ng/m3 • Exhaust air form dental vacuum systems contains 3,915 times more Hg than ambient air samples • Exhaust air from dental vacuum systems had 2.6-to-51.7 times higher concentration of Hg than flue gas from combustion zones in coal-fired power plants 44

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