How UV Curing Generates Chemical Hazards
UV curing technology works by exposing specially formulated inks, coatings, and adhesives to ultraviolet radiation that triggers rapid polymerisation of photoinitiator compounds. This photochemical reaction is extremely efficient for curing but generates hazardous by-products that many printing businesses have not adequately assessed. Formaldehyde is produced as a decomposition product of certain photoinitiator families, particularly Type I photoinitiators based on alpha-hydroxy ketones and acylphosphine oxides. The concentration of formaldehyde generated depends on the photoinitiator type, concentration, UV dose, and substrate. Ozone is generated through a separate mechanism entirely — UV-C radiation at wavelengths below 240 nanometres causes photodissociation of molecular oxygen in the ambient air, producing ozone. Mercury vapour UV lamps emit significant UV-C radiation and are therefore strong ozone generators, while UV LED systems operating at 365 or 395 nanometres do not emit UV-C and therefore do not generate ozone. Understanding these two distinct generation mechanisms is essential for designing effective control strategies because each requires different engineering interventions.
Formaldehyde Controls for UV Curing Operations
The incoming WEL for formaldehyde of 0.3 ppm represents a 70 per cent reduction from the current WES of 1 ppm, making it one of the most significant WEL changes for printing operations. Controlling formaldehyde from UV curing requires a combination of source reduction and extraction ventilation. Source reduction involves selecting UV inks and coatings formulated with low-emission photoinitiators that generate minimal formaldehyde during curing. Ink manufacturers can provide emissions data for their formulations, and printing businesses should request this data as part of their procurement process. Extraction ventilation at the UV curing unit must capture formaldehyde-laden air before it enters the operator breathing zone, with exhaust ductwork drawing air through and away from the curing zone. The exhaust flow rate must be sufficient to maintain formaldehyde concentrations below 0.3 ppm at the nearest operator position, which typically requires higher extraction rates than those installed when the current 1 ppm WES was the compliance target. Continuous formaldehyde monitoring using electrochemical or photoacoustic sensors provides real-time feedback on exposure levels and should be installed at operator breathing zone height near UV curing stations.