2017
DOI: 10.1016/j.wasman.2017.03.042
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Optimal management program for asbestos containing building materials to be available in the event of a disaster

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Cited by 20 publications
(22 citation statements)
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References 29 publications
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“…Brown and Milke (2016), Takeda et al (2015), Trivedi et al (2015), Brown et al (2011a), Grzeda. et al (2014), Yusof et al (2016), Crowley and Flachsbart (2018), Kim and Hong (2017), Crowley ( 2017 Man-made disaster Aoki (2018), Noh et al (2015) and Zhang et al (2017). 3…”
Section: Disaster Type Mentioned In the Selected Papersmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Brown and Milke (2016), Takeda et al (2015), Trivedi et al (2015), Brown et al (2011a), Grzeda. et al (2014), Yusof et al (2016), Crowley and Flachsbart (2018), Kim and Hong (2017), Crowley ( 2017 Man-made disaster Aoki (2018), Noh et al (2015) and Zhang et al (2017). 3…”
Section: Disaster Type Mentioned In the Selected Papersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Given that exposures to hazardous wastes results in high risk of public health, managing such materials is of great significant, especially in disaster contexts (Zhang et al, 2017;Kim and Hong, 2017). For example, (1) Wood is widely used for construction, and it is often treated by hazardous materials (e.g.…”
Section: Level Of Hazardsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The term asbestos is a generic term that comprises some natural minerals represented by hydrated silicates which are easily separable into thin and flexible fibers. 73,74 Asbestos is the common name used for two families of fibrous minerals that differ in crystal and chemical characteristics: serpentine (i.e., chrysotile) and amphiboles (i.e., crocidolite, amosite, anthophyllite, actinolite, and tremolite). 75 The use of asbestos was prohibited in several countries, 75 mainly after verification of the health risk related to extraction and production.…”
Section: Asbestos-containing Chrysotilementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Exposure to asbestos has mutagenic effects, inducing some asbestos-related diseases, especially malignant mesothelioma. 73,74 The most dangerous fibers are those having a diameter of 0-1 μm and a length of 5-10 μm with small solubility. Asbestos fits the latter type of fiber, so its use is banned worldwide.…”
Section: Asbestos-containing Chrysotilementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Asbestos, due to its properties, i.e., high tensile strength, poor thermal conductivity, sound absorbing properties and relative chemical resistance [4] became very popular material not only in industry, but also in products of everyday life. Its common use in building (asbestos-cement tiles and pipes), in power engineering (high chimneys, where dilatations are filled with asbestos ropes, heating routes insulation-asbestos-cement coats), in transport industry (engine thermal insulations of motor vehicles and exhaust manifolds), in chemical industry (asbestos membranes used in electrolytic chlorine production), in military sector, in textile industry (incombustible textiles used by firemen), but also in other branches of national economy, made asbestos the cause of many negative phenomena and processes [5][6][7][8][9][10].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%