Screening-level Environmental Burden Assessments for Metals Use in Electronics: A Case Study on the U.S. Printed Wiring Board Industry

The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
Carl W. Lam
Organization:
The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
Pages:
4
File Size:
275 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2010

Abstract

The increased obsolescence rate of electronic products has made it evermore pertinent to understand the potential environmental impact of materials choices to help guide electronic waste (e-waste) management and promote awareness of high burden materials. Methods for screening for the performance of materials and their potential burden on human health and the environment can be used to comparatively select constituents of present and prospective electronic products. These methods should be able to yield more robust information when linked to other decision-making strategies where integrated data on consumer preferences, production quantities, and regulatory initiatives are sparse or unavailable. A framework is presented here for generating metrics of ecological toxicity, human health toxicity (cancer and non-cancer categories) and global resource consumption for evaluating environmental impact of materials (specifically metals) in electronic products. The time-dependent impact trends of United States? printed wiring board (PWB) metals usage, principally derive
Citation

APA: Carl W. Lam  (2010)  Screening-level Environmental Burden Assessments for Metals Use in Electronics: A Case Study on the U.S. Printed Wiring Board Industry

MLA: Carl W. Lam Screening-level Environmental Burden Assessments for Metals Use in Electronics: A Case Study on the U.S. Printed Wiring Board Industry. The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society, 2010.

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