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Analysis of Tyre Tread for Metal Tracers with Applications in Environmental Monitoring

2023 4 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
David O'Loughlin, Molly J. Haugen, Jason Day, Andrew S. Brown, Emma C. Braysher, Nick Molden, Anne E. Willis, Marion MacFarlane, Adam Boies

Summary

Researchers analyzed tyre tread rubber from passenger car and heavy goods vehicle tyres for 25 elements by ICP-MS to develop a multielement fingerprint for tyre wear as an environmental tracer, finding 19 of the 25 elements detectable and identifying limitations of zinc as a single-element proxy. Thermogravimetric analysis was also used to estimate the inert filler fraction, and compositional differences between tread and sidewall were documented.

Polymers

The purpose of this study was to identify a characteristic elemental tyre fingerprint that can be utilised in atmospheric source apportionment calculations. Currently zinc is widely used as a single element tracer to quantify tyre wear, however several authors have highlighted issues with this approach. To overcome this, tyre rubber tread was digested and has been analysed for 25 elements by ICP-MS to generate a multielement profile. Additionally, to estimate the percentage of the tyre made up of inert fillers, thermogravimetric analysis was performed on a subset. Comparisons were made between passenger car and heavy goods vehicle tyre composition, and a subset of tyres had both tread and sidewall sampled for further comparison. Finds showed 19 of the 25 elements were detected in the analysis. The mean mass fraction of zinc detected was 11.17 g/kg, consistent with previous estimates of 1% of the tyre mass. Aluminium, iron, and magnesium were found to be the next most abundant elements, and barium, magnesium and tin were all detected at higher concentrations than have been reported previously. The analysis found significant differences in elemental composition of goods vehicle and passenger car tyres, which could potentially allow for separate source profiles for each type. Only one source profile for tyre wear exists in both the US and EU air pollution species profile databases, highlighting the need for more recent data with better coverage of tyre makes and models. This study provides data on new tyres which are currently operating on-road in Europe and is therefore relevant for ongoing atmospheric studies assessing the levels of tyre wear particles in urban areas.

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