Grocery Cart Tire Wear
Transmitted Off Crossed Circular Polarized Light and Reflected Darkfield
Illumination
Definition/Function:
Tire wear particles are a carbonblack pigmented mixture of natural and synthetic
elastomers (rubber) with various mineral
and fiber fillers and reenforcement. They typically contain from 30% to 45% by
weight elastomer. The balance of the
weight in the particle is pigment and filler material. Calcite and quartz are two
common fillers but wood sawdust, glass,
clay, talc, feldspar and other minerals may also be used. Tire wear particles are
generated by abrasion as a result of the
friction caused by the relative motion between a rubber surface (tire, drivebelt, or
conveyer belt) and a non-rubber
surface (road, floor, or drive wheel). The shape and size of the particle is
determined by the relative properties of the
rubber surface, the non-rubber surface, and the force exterted between the two.
Truck tires contain more natural rubber
by design and that results in longer tapered cylinders than is the case with
automoble tires under the same conditions.
Very long tapered cylinders are created by the tires of vehicles used in warehouse
environments. This is due to the
relative smooth surface, which creates larger uniform microenvironments on the
contact surface, and the higher rubber
content in the tires needed to get traction on the smooth floor.
Drivebelt wear is very similar to tire wear but the associated particle assemblage
is different (see below).
Significance in the Environment:
The amount of tire wear particles in an environmental sample indicates the
relative proximity to vehicular traffic and the
relative ease of transport from that source to the sample site. For indoor
environments the population is normalized
against skin flakes, paper fiber, and clothing fiber. For outdoor environments
it can be normalized against the plant and
fungal background. High concentrations of tire wear generally indicate a high
exposure to vehicle emission.
"Tire wear" particles may also indicate wear of black rubber drive belts in the
HVAC system or in other locations where a
black rubber surface rubs against a non-rubber surface.
Characteristic Features:
Tire wear particles are characterized by their very rough texture and
"fractile" outline. The particles tend to be tapered
cylinders with the aspect ratio determined by the texture of the non-rubber
surface and the amount and type of elastomer
in the tire or rubber belt. Thin edges of the particle are transparent,
depending on the concentration and distribution
of the black pigment. Filler minerals typically protude from the edges of
the particle at a few locations along the edge
and can be seen between crossed polarizing filters. Off crossed circular
polarized light (slight rotation of one of the
polarizing filters) can be very useful in order to see the black particle
outline as well as the birefringent filler
particles. Darkfield reflected light is also very useful to characterize the
surface texture of the particle.
Tire wear particles can be destinguished from large combustion particles by
the presence of small highlight reflectivity
on the tire wear particles caused by the refractive indix difference between
the rubber and the mounting medium and the
larger granularity of the rubber particle surface.
Tire wear particles can be destinguished from large cenospheres (carbonized
liquid fuel, typically from Bunker C fueled
boilers) by the higher reflectivity of the cenosphere surface due to the
graphine structure of the carbon in the cenosphere.
Tire wear particles can be destinguished from charred wood and plant
material by the cell morphology and higher reflectivity
of the charred plant material.
This is a tapelift from the lower shelf in a grocery store. The tires on a
grocery cart have relatively little natural
rubber. The high aspect ratio here is due to the flat, smooth floor over
which the tire runs.
Associated Particles:
Tire wear is typically associated with a road wear mineral content
greater than that of the tire wear component of the
sample. If tire wear exceeds the road wear mineral content then a
parking garage environment may be indicated. If that
is not the case then another black rubber wear source must be present.
Pollens, spores, plant parts, and other outdoor
particles are generally associated with the tire wear. If they are less
evident then mechanical transport of tire wear
from outside is indicated and other mechanically transported particles;
such as moss fragments, etc.; should be present.
Drive belt wear particles are typically associated with the HVAC blower
in office and school environments. If the drive
belt for the blower is the source then other typical HVAC agglomerates
will also be seen in the sample. If they are not
seen then another source of black rubber wear particles should be found.
References: