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Cigarette filter

A cigarette filter, also known as a filter tip, is a component of a cigarette, along with cigarette paper, capsules and adhesives. Filters were introduced in the early 1950s.[3]

Filters in a new and used cigarette. Filters were designed to turn brown with use to give the illusion that they were effective at reducing the harmfulness.[1][2]
Components of a filter cigarette:
  1. Cigarette filter
  2. Imitation cork tip paper
  3. Cigarette paper
  4. Tobacco

Filters may be made from plastic cellulose acetate fiber, paper or activated charcoal (either as a cavity filter or embedded into the plastic cellulose acetate fibers). Macroporous phenol-formaldehyde resins and asbestos have also been used.[4][5] The plastic cellulose acetate filter and paper modify the particulate smoke phase by particle retention (filtration), and finely divided carbon modifies the gaseous phase (adsorption).[6]

Filters are intended to reduce the harm caused by smoking by reducing harmful elements inhaled by smokers. They have been shown to reduce the risk of lung cancer.[7] While laboratory tests show a reduction of "tar" and nicotine in cigarette smoke, filters are ineffective at removing gases of low molecular weight, such as carbon monoxide.[8] Most of these measured reductions[which?] occur only when the cigarette is smoked on a smoking machine; when smoked by a human, the compounds are delivered into the lungs regardless of whether a filter is used.[2]

Most factory-made cigarettes are equipped with a filter; those who roll their own can buy them from a tobacconist.[2]

History

In 1925, Hungarian inventor Boris Aivaz patented the process of making a cigarette filter from crepe paper.[9]

From 1935, Molins Machine Co Ltd [10] a British company began to develop a machine that made cigarettes incorporating the tipped filter. It was considered a specialty item until 1954, when manufacturers introduced the machine more broadly, following a spate of speculative announcements from doctors and researchers concerning a possible link between lung diseases and smoking. Since filtered cigarettes were considered safer, by the 1960s, they dominated the market. Production of filter cigarettes rose from 0.5 percent in 1950 to 87.7 percent by 1975.[11]

Between the 1930s and the 1950s, most cigarettes were 70 millimetres (2+34 in) long. The modern cigarette market includes mainly filter cigarettes that are 80, 85, 100, or 120 millimetres (3+183+383+78, or 4+34 in).[12]

Cigarettes filters were originally made of cork and used to prevent tobacco flakes from getting on the smoker's tongue. Many are still patterned to look like cork.[1]

Manufacture

 
Spent cigarette filter
Colour change

The cigarette smoking public attaches great significance to visual examination of the filter material in filter tip cigarettes after smoking the cigarettes. A before and after smoking visual comparison is usually made and if the filter tip material, after smoking, is darkened, the tip is automatically judged to be effective. While the use of such colour change material would probably have little or no effect on the actual effectiveness of the filter tip material, the advertising and sales advantages are obvious.

— Claude Teague, the inventor of the colour-changing filter[2]

Cigarette filters are usually made from plastic cellulose acetate fibre,[3] but sometimes also from paper or activated charcoal (either as a cavity filter or embedded into the cellulose acetate).

Cellulose acetate is made by esterifying bleached cotton or wood pulp with acetic acid. Of the three cellulose hydroxy groups available for esterification, between two and three are esterified by controlling the amount of acid (degree of substitution (DS) 2.35-2.55). The ester is spun into fibers and formed into bundles called filter tow. Flavors (menthol), sweeteners, softeners (triacetin), flame retardants (sodium tungstate), breakable capsules releasing flavors on demand, and additives colouring the tobacco smoke[citation needed] may be added to cigarette filters.[13][14] The five largest manufactures of filter tow are Celanese and Eastman Chemicals in the United States, Cerdia in Germany, Daicel and Mitsubishi Rayon in Japan.

Starch glues or emulsion-based adhesives are used for gluing cigarette seams. Hot-melt and emulsion-based adhesives are used for filter seams. Emulsion-based adhesives are used for bonding the filters to the cigarettes.[15] The tip paper may be coated with polyvinyl alcohol.[16]

Colour change

The tobacco industry determined that the illusion of filtration was more important than filtration itself. The pH of the cellulose acetate used is modified, so that its colour becomes darker when exposed to smoke (this was invented in 1953 by Claude Teague, working for R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company).[17] The industry wanted filters to be seen as effective for marketing reasons, despite not making cigarettes any less unhealthy.[3][failed verification]

Health risks

In the 1970s epidemiologic evidence relative to tobacco-related cancers and data for coronary heart disease indicated a reduced risk among filter smokers for these diseases.[18] Between 1970 and 1980 some studies showed a 20-50% reduction in risk of lung cancer for long-term smokers of filtered cigarettes as compared to smokers of non-filtered cigarettes (IARC, 1986) but later studies indicated a similar risk for lung cancer in smokers of filtered and non-filtered cigarettes.[19] The risk reductions depend on different aspects such as the gender or whether a person is athletic, the study location, the age of the person, and when only studies providing both unadjusted and adjusted estimates were considered. Whether or not relative risk estimates are adjusted for cigarette consumption is not crucial to the conclusion of a clear advantage to filter cigarettes and tar reduction.[20]

Various add-on cigarette filters ("Water Pik", "Venturi", "David Ross") are sold as stop-smoking or tar-reduction devices. The idea is that filters reduce tar and nicotine levels, permitting the smoker to be weaned away from cigarettes.[21]

Light cigarettes

The tobacco industry has reduced tar and nicotine yields in cigarette smoke since the 1960s. This has been achieved in a variety of ways, including use of selected strains of tobacco plant, changes in agricultural and curing procedures, use of reconstituted sheets (reprocessed tobacco leaf waste), incorporation of tobacco stalks, reduction of the amount of tobacco needed to fill a cigarette by expanding it (like puffed wheat) to increase its "filling power", and by the use of filters and high-porosity wrapping papers. However, just as a drinker tends to drink a larger volume of beer than of wine or spirits, many smokers tend to inversely modify their smoking pattern according to the strength of the cigarette being smoked. In contrast to the standardized puffing of the smoking machines on which the tar and nicotine yields are based, when a smoker switches to a low-tar, low nicotine cigarette, they smoke more cigarettes, take more puffs and inhale more deeply. Conversely, when smoking a high-tar, high-nicotine cigarette there is a tendency to smoke and inhale less.[22]

In spite of the changes in cigarette design and manufacturing over the last fifty years, the use of filters and "light" cigarettes neither decreased the nicotine intake per cigarette, nor lowered the incidence of lung cancer (NCI, 2001; IARC 83, 2004; U.S. Surgeon General, 2004).[23] The shift over the years from higher- to lower-yield cigarettes may explain the change in the pathology of lung cancer. That is, the percentage of lung cancers that are adenocarcinomas has increased, while the percentage of squamous cell cancers has decreased. The change in tumor type is believed to reflect the higher nitrosamine delivery of lower-yield cigarettes and the increased depth or volume of inhalation of lower-yield cigarettes to compensate for lower level concentrations of nicotine in the smoke.[24]

Safety

 
Structure formula of cellulose diacetate with one of the acetate groups on the cellulose backbone shown by the red circle.

Cellulose acetate is non-toxic, odorless, tasteless, and weakly flammable plastic. It is resistant to weak acids and is largely stable to mineral and fatty oils as well as petroleum. Smoked (i.e., used/discarded) cigarette butts contain 5–7 mg (~ 0.08-0.11 gr) of nicotine (about 25% of the total cigarette nicotine content). Cellulose acetate is hydrophilic and retains the water-soluble smoke constituents (many of which are irritating, including acids, alkali, aldehydes, and phenols), while letting through the lipophilic aromatic compounds.

Waste

 
A cigarette butt littered on the ground

Cigarette butts are the most littered anthropogenic (man-made) waste item in the world. Approximately 5.6 trillion cigarettes are smoked every year worldwide.[25] Of these, it is estimated that 4.5 trillion cigarette butts become litter every year.[26] The plastic cellulose acetate in cigarette butts biodegrade gradually, passing through the stage of microplastics.[27] The breakdown of discarded cigarette butts is highly dependent upon environmental conditions. A 2021 review article cites an experiment where 45-50% of cellulose acetate mass was fully degraded to CO2 after 55 days of controlled composting and another where negligible degradation took place after 12 weeks in pilot-scale compost.[28][29][30]

During the act of smoking, plastic cellulose acetate fibers and tipping paper absorb a wide range of chemicals that are present in tobacco smoke. After cigarette butts are discarded, they can leach toxins including nicotine, arsenic, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and heavy metals into the environment.[31] Smoked cigarette butts and cigarette tobacco in butts have been shown to be toxic to water organisms such as the marine topsmelt (Atherinops affinis) and the freshwater fathead minnow (Pimephales promelas).[32]

Atmospheric moisture, gastric acid, light, and enzymes hydrolyze cellulose acetate to acetic acid and cellulose. Cellulose may be further hydrolyzed to cellobiose or glucose in an acidic medium. Humans cannot digest cellulose and excrete the fibers in feces, because, unlike ruminant animals, rabbits, rodents, termites, and some bacteria and fungi, they lack cellulolytic enzymes such as cellulase.[citation needed]

 
Ashtray full of cigarette butts

Many governments have sanctioned stiff penalties for littering of cigarette filters; for example Washington State imposes a penalty of $1,025 for littering cigarette filters.[33] Another option is developing better biodegradable filters. Much of this work relies heavily on the research about the secondary mechanism for photodegradation. However, making a product biodegradable means making it vulnerable to humidity and heat, which does not suit filters made for hot and humid smoke.[17] The next option is using cigarette packs with a compartment for discarded cigarette butts, implementing monetary deposits on filters, increasing the availability of cigarette receptacles, and expanding public education. It may even be possible to ban the sale of filtered cigarettes altogether on the basis of their adverse environmental impact.[25]

Recent research has been put into finding ways to use the filter waste in order to develop other products. One research group in South Korea have developed a one-step process that converts the cellulose acetate in discarded cigarette filters into a high-performing supercapacitor electrode material. These materials have demonstrated superior performance as compared to commercially available carbon, graphene and carbon nano tubes.[34]

Another group of researchers has proposed adding tablets of food grade acid inside the filters. Once wet enough the tablets would release acid that accelerates degradation to around two weeks, instead of using cellulose triacetate and besides of cigarette smoke being quite acidic.[35][dead link]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Kennedy, Pagan (6 July 2012). "Who Made That Cigarette Filter?". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 4 September 2018.
  2. ^ a b c d Harris, Bradford (1 May 2011). "The intractable cigarette 'filter problem'". Tobacco Control. 20 (Suppl 1): –10–i16. doi:10.1136/tc.2010.040113. eISSN 1468-3318. ISSN 0964-4563. PMC 3088411. PMID 21504917.
  3. ^ a b c Monograph 13: Risks associated with smoking cigarettes with low tar machine-measured yields of tar and nicotine. National Cancer Institute (Report). United States Department of Health and Human Services. 2001.
  4. ^ Francois de Dardel; Thomas V. Arden (2007), "Ion Exchangers", Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry (7th ed.), Wiley, pp. 1–74, doi:10.1002/14356007.a14_393, ISBN 978-3527306732
  5. ^ Seymour S. Chissick (2007), "Asbestos", Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry (7th ed.), Wiley, pp. 1–18, doi:10.1002/14356007.a03_151, ISBN 978-3527306732
  6. ^ T. C. Tso (2007), "Tobacco", Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry (7th ed.), Wiley, pp. 1–26, doi:10.1002/14356007.a27_123, ISBN 978-3527306732
  7. ^ Thomas, N.; Tanner, N.T.; Ward, R.; Rojewski, A.; Gebregziabher, M.; Toll, B.; Silvestri, G.A. (2019). "Filtered, Unfiltered, Light, Ultralight, Regular or Mentholated: The Effect of Cigarette Type on Lung Cancer Incidence and Mortality in the National Lung Screening Trial". D19. Lung Cancer Screening: Novel Insights on Patient Selection and Outcomes. pp. A5894. doi:10.1164/ajrccm-conference.2019.199.1_MeetingAbstracts.A5894. S2CID 202823625.
  8. ^ Robert Kapp (2005), "Tobacco Smoke", Encyclopedia of Toxicology, vol. 4 (2nd ed.), Elsevier, pp. 200–202, ISBN 978-0-12-745354-5
  9. ^ . tobaccoasia.com. Archived from the original on 24 August 2003. Retrieved 18 May 2008.
  10. ^ "Cigarette with Filter tip" (PDF).
  11. ^ Leonard M. Schuman (1977), "Patterns of Smoking Behavior", in Murray E. Jarvik; Joseph W. Cullen; Ellen R. Gritz; Thomas M. Vogt; Louis Jolyon West (eds.), (PDF), NIDA Research Monograph, vol. 17, pp. 36–65, archived from the original (PDF) on 23 July 2015, retrieved 21 October 2015
  12. ^ Lynn T. Kozlowski (1983), "Physical Indicators of Actual Tar and Nicotine Yields of Cigarettes", in John Grabowski; Catherine S. Bell (eds.), (PDF), NIDA Research Monograph, vol. 48, U.S. Dept. of Health and Human Services, pp. 50–61, PMID 6443144, archived from the original (PDF) on 17 October 2016, retrieved 29 March 2016
  13. ^ Ralf Christoph; Bernd Schmidt; Udo Steinberner; Wolfgang Dilla; Reetta Karinen (2007), "Glycerol", Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry (7th ed.), Wiley, pp. 1–16, doi:10.1002/14356007.a12_477.pub2, ISBN 978-3527306732
  14. ^ Erik Lassner; Wolf-Dieter Schubert; Eberhard Luderitz; Hans Uwe Wolf (2007), "Tungsten, Tungsten Alloys, and Tungsten Compounds", Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry (7th ed.), Wiley, pp. 1–37, doi:10.1002/14356007.a27_229, ISBN 978-3527306732
  15. ^ Werner Haller; Hermann Onusseit; Gerhard Gierenz; Werner Gruber; Richard D. Rich; Günter Henke; Lothar Thiele; Horst Hoffmann; Dieter Dausmann; Riza-Nur Özelli; Udo Windhövel; Hans-Peter Sattler; Wolfgang Dierichs; Günter Tauber; Michael Hirthammer; Christoph Matz; Matthew Holloway; David Melody; Ernst-Ulrich Rust; Ansgar van Halteren (2007), "Adhesives", Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry (7th ed.), Wiley, pp. 1–70, doi:10.1002/14356007.a01_221, ISBN 978-3527306732
  16. ^ F. L. Marten (2002), "Vinyl Alcohol Polymers", Kirk-Othmer Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology (5th ed.), Wiley, p. 26, doi:10.1002/0471238961.2209142513011820.a01.pub2, ISBN 0471238961
  17. ^ a b Robert N. Proctor (2012). Golden Holocaust: Origins of the Cigarette Catastrophe and the Case for Abolition. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 9780520270169.
  18. ^ Ernst L. Wynder (1977), "Interrelationship of Smoking to Other Variables and Preventive Approaches", in Murray E. Jarvik; Joseph W. Cullen; Ellen R. Gritz; Thomas M. Vogt; Louis Jolyon West (eds.), (PDF), NIDA Research Monograph, vol. 17, pp. 67–95, PMID 417264, archived from the original (PDF) on 23 July 2015, retrieved 21 October 2015
  19. ^ K. Rothwell; et al. (1999), Health effects of interactions between tobacco use and exposure to other agents, Environmental Health Criteria, World Health Organization
  20. ^ Lee, Peter N.; Sanders, Edward (1 December 2004). "Does increased cigarette consumption nullify any reduction in lung cancer risk associated with low-tar filter cigarettes?". Inhalation Toxicology. 16 (13): 817–833. doi:10.1080/08958370490490185. ISSN 0895-8378. PMID 15513814. S2CID 22468291.
  21. ^ Jerome L. Schwartz (1977), "Smoking Cures: Ways to Kick an Unhealthy Habit", in Murray E. Jarvik; Joseph W. Cullen; Ellen R. Gritz; Thomas M. Vogt; Louis Jolyon West (eds.), (PDF), NIDA Research Monograph, vol. 17, pp. 308–336, archived from the original (PDF) on 23 July 2015, retrieved 21 October 2015
  22. ^ Michael A. H. Russell (1977), "Smoking Problems: An Overview", in Murray E. Jarvik; Joseph W. Cullen; Ellen R. Gritz; Thomas M. Vogt; Louis Jolyon West (eds.), (PDF), NIDA Research Monograph, vol. 17, pp. 13–34, archived from the original (PDF) on 23 July 2015, retrieved 21 October 2015
  23. ^ Anthony J. Alberg; Jonathan M. Samet (2010), "Epidemiology of Lung Cancer", in Robert J. Mason; V. Courtney Broaddus; Thomas R. Martin; Talmadge E. King, Jr.; Dean E. Schraufnagel; John F. Murray; Jay A. Nadel (eds.), Murray and Nadel's Textbook of Respiratory Medicine, vol. 1 (5th ed.), Saunders, ISBN 978-1-4160-4710-0
  24. ^ Neal L. Benowitz; Paul G. Brunetta (2010), "Smoking Hazards and Cessation", in Robert J. Mason; V. Courtney Broaddus; Thomas R. Martin; Talmadge E. King, Jr.; Dean E. Schraufnagel; John F. Murray; Jay A. Nadel (eds.), Murray and Nadel's Textbook of Respiratory Medicine, vol. 1 (5th ed.), Saunders, ISBN 978-1-4160-4710-0
  25. ^ a b Novotny TE, Lum K, Smith E, et al. (2009). "Cigarettes butts and the case for an environmental policy on hazardous cigarette waste". International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 6 (5): 1691–705. doi:10.3390/ijerph6051691. PMC 2697937. PMID 19543415.
  26. ^ "The world litters 4.5 trillion cigarette butts a year. Can we stop this?". The Houston Chronicle. 12 May 2010. Retrieved 16 September 2014.
  27. ^ Frederic Beaudry (3 July 2019). "Are Cigarette Butts Biodegradable?". treehugger.com. Retrieved 31 August 2022.
  28. ^ Yadav, Nisha; Hakkarainen, Minna (2021). "Degradable or not? Cellulose acetate as a model for complicated interplay between structure, environment and degradation". Chemosphere. 265: 128731. Bibcode:2021Chmsp.265l8731Y. doi:10.1016/j.chemosphere.2020.128731. PMID 33127118.
  29. ^ Cantú, Aaron (12 February 2014). "New 'Green' Cigarette Butts Biodegrade Within Days—And Can Even Sprout Into Grass - The company Greenbutts is manufacturing a new filter to address most common litter problem". AlterNet.
  30. ^ Chamas, Ali (2020). "Degradation Rates of Plastics in the Environment". ACS Sustainable Chemistry & Engineering. 8 (9): 3494–3511. doi:10.1021/acssuschemeng.9b06635.
  31. ^ Moriwaki, Hiroshi; Kitajima, Shiori; Katahira, Kenshi (2009). "Waste on the roadside, 'poi-sute' waste: Its distribution and elution potential of pollutants into environment". Waste Management. 29 (3): 1192–1197. doi:10.1016/j.wasman.2008.08.017. hdl:10091/3192. PMID 18851907.
  32. ^ Slaughter E, Gersberg RM, Watanabe K, Rudolph J, Stransky C, Novotny TE (2011). "Toxicity of cigarette butts, and their chemical components, to marine and freshwater fish". Tobacco Control. 20 (Suppl_1): 25–29. doi:10.1136/tc.2010.040170. PMC 3088407. PMID 21504921.
  33. ^ . Washington: State of Washington Department of Ecology. 1 June 2004. Archived from the original on 17 October 2016. Retrieved 19 September 2016.
  34. ^ Minzae L, Gil-Pyo K, Hyeon DS, Soomin P, Jongheop Y (2014). "Preparation of energy storage material derived from a used cigarette filter for a supercapacitor electrode". Nanotechnology. 25 (34): 34. Bibcode:2014Nanot..25H5601L. doi:10.1088/0957-4484/25/34/345601. PMID 25092115. S2CID 8692351.
  35. ^ "No more butts: biodegradable filters a step to boot litter problem". Environmental Health News. 14 August 2012.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)

cigarette, filter, cigarette, filter, also, known, filter, component, cigarette, along, with, cigarette, paper, capsules, adhesives, filters, were, introduced, early, 1950s, filters, used, cigarette, filters, were, designed, turn, brown, with, give, illusion, . A cigarette filter also known as a filter tip is a component of a cigarette along with cigarette paper capsules and adhesives Filters were introduced in the early 1950s 3 Filters in a new and used cigarette Filters were designed to turn brown with use to give the illusion that they were effective at reducing the harmfulness 1 2 Components of a filter cigarette Cigarette filterImitation cork tip paperCigarette paperTobacco Filters may be made from plastic cellulose acetate fiber paper or activated charcoal either as a cavity filter or embedded into the plastic cellulose acetate fibers Macroporous phenol formaldehyde resins and asbestos have also been used 4 5 The plastic cellulose acetate filter and paper modify the particulate smoke phase by particle retention filtration and finely divided carbon modifies the gaseous phase adsorption 6 Filters are intended to reduce the harm caused by smoking by reducing harmful elements inhaled by smokers They have been shown to reduce the risk of lung cancer 7 While laboratory tests show a reduction of tar and nicotine in cigarette smoke filters are ineffective at removing gases of low molecular weight such as carbon monoxide 8 Most of these measured reductions which occur only when the cigarette is smoked on a smoking machine when smoked by a human the compounds are delivered into the lungs regardless of whether a filter is used 2 Most factory made cigarettes are equipped with a filter those who roll their own can buy them from a tobacconist 2 Contents 1 History 2 Manufacture 2 1 Colour change 3 Health risks 3 1 Light cigarettes 4 Safety 5 Waste 6 See also 7 ReferencesHistory EditIn 1925 Hungarian inventor Boris Aivaz patented the process of making a cigarette filter from crepe paper 9 From 1935 Molins Machine Co Ltd 10 a British company began to develop a machine that made cigarettes incorporating the tipped filter It was considered a specialty item until 1954 when manufacturers introduced the machine more broadly following a spate of speculative announcements from doctors and researchers concerning a possible link between lung diseases and smoking Since filtered cigarettes were considered safer by the 1960s they dominated the market Production of filter cigarettes rose from 0 5 percent in 1950 to 87 7 percent by 1975 11 Between the 1930s and the 1950s most cigarettes were 70 millimetres 2 3 4 in long The modern cigarette market includes mainly filter cigarettes that are 80 85 100 or 120 millimetres 3 1 8 3 3 8 3 7 8 or 4 3 4 in 12 Cigarettes filters were originally made of cork and used to prevent tobacco flakes from getting on the smoker s tongue Many are still patterned to look like cork 1 Manufacture Edit Spent cigarette filter Colour change The cigarette smoking public attaches great significance to visual examination of the filter material in filter tip cigarettes after smoking the cigarettes A before and after smoking visual comparison is usually made and if the filter tip material after smoking is darkened the tip is automatically judged to be effective While the use of such colour change material would probably have little or no effect on the actual effectiveness of the filter tip material the advertising and sales advantages are obvious Claude Teague the inventor of the colour changing filter 2 Cigarette filters are usually made from plastic cellulose acetate fibre 3 but sometimes also from paper or activated charcoal either as a cavity filter or embedded into the cellulose acetate Cellulose acetate is made by esterifying bleached cotton or wood pulp with acetic acid Of the three cellulose hydroxy groups available for esterification between two and three are esterified by controlling the amount of acid degree of substitution DS 2 35 2 55 The ester is spun into fibers and formed into bundles called filter tow Flavors menthol sweeteners softeners triacetin flame retardants sodium tungstate breakable capsules releasing flavors on demand and additives colouring the tobacco smoke citation needed may be added to cigarette filters 13 14 The five largest manufactures of filter tow are Celanese and Eastman Chemicals in the United States Cerdia in Germany Daicel and Mitsubishi Rayon in Japan Starch glues or emulsion based adhesives are used for gluing cigarette seams Hot melt and emulsion based adhesives are used for filter seams Emulsion based adhesives are used for bonding the filters to the cigarettes 15 The tip paper may be coated with polyvinyl alcohol 16 Colour change Edit The tobacco industry determined that the illusion of filtration was more important than filtration itself The pH of the cellulose acetate used is modified so that its colour becomes darker when exposed to smoke this was invented in 1953 by Claude Teague working for R J Reynolds Tobacco Company 17 The industry wanted filters to be seen as effective for marketing reasons despite not making cigarettes any less unhealthy 3 failed verification Health risks EditMain article Health effects of tobacco This article needs more medical references for verification or relies too heavily on primary sources specifically out of date sources does not reflect the balance of evidence Please review the contents of the article and add the appropriate references if you can Unsourced or poorly sourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Cigarette filter news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2018 In the 1970s epidemiologic evidence relative to tobacco related cancers and data for coronary heart disease indicated a reduced risk among filter smokers for these diseases 18 Between 1970 and 1980 some studies showed a 20 50 reduction in risk of lung cancer for long term smokers of filtered cigarettes as compared to smokers of non filtered cigarettes IARC 1986 but later studies indicated a similar risk for lung cancer in smokers of filtered and non filtered cigarettes 19 The risk reductions depend on different aspects such as the gender or whether a person is athletic the study location the age of the person and when only studies providing both unadjusted and adjusted estimates were considered Whether or not relative risk estimates are adjusted for cigarette consumption is not crucial to the conclusion of a clear advantage to filter cigarettes and tar reduction 20 Various add on cigarette filters Water Pik Venturi David Ross are sold as stop smoking or tar reduction devices The idea is that filters reduce tar and nicotine levels permitting the smoker to be weaned away from cigarettes 21 Light cigarettes Edit Main article Ventilated cigarette The tobacco industry has reduced tar and nicotine yields in cigarette smoke since the 1960s This has been achieved in a variety of ways including use of selected strains of tobacco plant changes in agricultural and curing procedures use of reconstituted sheets reprocessed tobacco leaf waste incorporation of tobacco stalks reduction of the amount of tobacco needed to fill a cigarette by expanding it like puffed wheat to increase its filling power and by the use of filters and high porosity wrapping papers However just as a drinker tends to drink a larger volume of beer than of wine or spirits many smokers tend to inversely modify their smoking pattern according to the strength of the cigarette being smoked In contrast to the standardized puffing of the smoking machines on which the tar and nicotine yields are based when a smoker switches to a low tar low nicotine cigarette they smoke more cigarettes take more puffs and inhale more deeply Conversely when smoking a high tar high nicotine cigarette there is a tendency to smoke and inhale less 22 In spite of the changes in cigarette design and manufacturing over the last fifty years the use of filters and light cigarettes neither decreased the nicotine intake per cigarette nor lowered the incidence of lung cancer NCI 2001 IARC 83 2004 U S Surgeon General 2004 23 The shift over the years from higher to lower yield cigarettes may explain the change in the pathology of lung cancer That is the percentage of lung cancers that are adenocarcinomas has increased while the percentage of squamous cell cancers has decreased The change in tumor type is believed to reflect the higher nitrosamine delivery of lower yield cigarettes and the increased depth or volume of inhalation of lower yield cigarettes to compensate for lower level concentrations of nicotine in the smoke 24 Safety Edit Structure formula of cellulose diacetate with one of the acetate groups on the cellulose backbone shown by the red circle Cellulose acetate is non toxic odorless tasteless and weakly flammable plastic It is resistant to weak acids and is largely stable to mineral and fatty oils as well as petroleum Smoked i e used discarded cigarette butts contain 5 7 mg 0 08 0 11 gr of nicotine about 25 of the total cigarette nicotine content Cellulose acetate is hydrophilic and retains the water soluble smoke constituents many of which are irritating including acids alkali aldehydes and phenols while letting through the lipophilic aromatic compounds Waste Edit A cigarette butt littered on the ground See also Plastic pollution and Marine pollution Plastic debris Cigarette butts are the most littered anthropogenic man made waste item in the world Approximately 5 6 trillion cigarettes are smoked every year worldwide 25 Of these it is estimated that 4 5 trillion cigarette butts become litter every year 26 The plastic cellulose acetate in cigarette butts biodegrade gradually passing through the stage of microplastics 27 The breakdown of discarded cigarette butts is highly dependent upon environmental conditions A 2021 review article cites an experiment where 45 50 of cellulose acetate mass was fully degraded to CO2 after 55 days of controlled composting and another where negligible degradation took place after 12 weeks in pilot scale compost 28 29 30 During the act of smoking plastic cellulose acetate fibers and tipping paper absorb a wide range of chemicals that are present in tobacco smoke After cigarette butts are discarded they can leach toxins including nicotine arsenic polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and heavy metals into the environment 31 Smoked cigarette butts and cigarette tobacco in butts have been shown to be toxic to water organisms such as the marine topsmelt Atherinops affinis and the freshwater fathead minnow Pimephales promelas 32 Atmospheric moisture gastric acid light and enzymes hydrolyze cellulose acetate to acetic acid and cellulose Cellulose may be further hydrolyzed to cellobiose or glucose in an acidic medium Humans cannot digest cellulose and excrete the fibers in feces because unlike ruminant animals rabbits rodents termites and some bacteria and fungi they lack cellulolytic enzymes such as cellulase citation needed Ashtray full of cigarette butts Many governments have sanctioned stiff penalties for littering of cigarette filters for example Washington State imposes a penalty of 1 025 for littering cigarette filters 33 Another option is developing better biodegradable filters Much of this work relies heavily on the research about the secondary mechanism for photodegradation However making a product biodegradable means making it vulnerable to humidity and heat which does not suit filters made for hot and humid smoke 17 The next option is using cigarette packs with a compartment for discarded cigarette butts implementing monetary deposits on filters increasing the availability of cigarette receptacles and expanding public education It may even be possible to ban the sale of filtered cigarettes altogether on the basis of their adverse environmental impact 25 Recent research has been put into finding ways to use the filter waste in order to develop other products One research group in South Korea have developed a one step process that converts the cellulose acetate in discarded cigarette filters into a high performing supercapacitor electrode material These materials have demonstrated superior performance as compared to commercially available carbon graphene and carbon nano tubes 34 Another group of researchers has proposed adding tablets of food grade acid inside the filters Once wet enough the tablets would release acid that accelerates degradation to around two weeks instead of using cellulose triacetate and besides of cigarette smoke being quite acidic 35 dead link See also EditCigarette butt Cigarette holder List of additives in cigarettes Nicotine marketing Tobacco smokingReferences Edit a b Kennedy Pagan 6 July 2012 Who Made That Cigarette Filter The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 4 September 2018 a b c d Harris Bradford 1 May 2011 The intractable cigarette filter problem Tobacco Control 20 Suppl 1 10 i16 doi 10 1136 tc 2010 040113 eISSN 1468 3318 ISSN 0964 4563 PMC 3088411 PMID 21504917 a b c Monograph 13 Risks associated with smoking cigarettes with low tar machine measured yields of tar and nicotine National Cancer Institute Report United States Department of Health and Human Services 2001 Francois de Dardel Thomas V Arden 2007 Ion Exchangers Ullmann s Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry 7th ed Wiley pp 1 74 doi 10 1002 14356007 a14 393 ISBN 978 3527306732 Seymour S Chissick 2007 Asbestos Ullmann s Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry 7th ed Wiley pp 1 18 doi 10 1002 14356007 a03 151 ISBN 978 3527306732 T C Tso 2007 Tobacco Ullmann s Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry 7th ed Wiley pp 1 26 doi 10 1002 14356007 a27 123 ISBN 978 3527306732 Thomas N Tanner N T Ward R Rojewski A Gebregziabher M Toll B Silvestri G A 2019 Filtered Unfiltered Light Ultralight Regular or Mentholated The Effect of Cigarette Type on Lung Cancer Incidence and Mortality in the National Lung Screening Trial D19 Lung Cancer Screening Novel Insights on Patient Selection and Outcomes pp A5894 doi 10 1164 ajrccm conference 2019 199 1 MeetingAbstracts A5894 S2CID 202823625 Robert Kapp 2005 Tobacco Smoke Encyclopedia of Toxicology vol 4 2nd ed Elsevier pp 200 202 ISBN 978 0 12 745354 5 The History of Filters tobaccoasia com Archived from the original on 24 August 2003 Retrieved 18 May 2008 Cigarette with Filter tip PDF Leonard M Schuman 1977 Patterns of Smoking Behavior in Murray E Jarvik Joseph W Cullen Ellen R Gritz Thomas M Vogt Louis Jolyon West eds Research on Smoking Behavior PDF NIDA Research Monograph vol 17 pp 36 65 archived from the original PDF on 23 July 2015 retrieved 21 October 2015 Lynn T Kozlowski 1983 Physical Indicators of Actual Tar and Nicotine Yields of Cigarettes in John Grabowski Catherine S Bell eds Measurement in the Analysis and Treatment of Smoking Behavior PDF NIDA Research Monograph vol 48 U S Dept of Health and Human Services pp 50 61 PMID 6443144 archived from the original PDF on 17 October 2016 retrieved 29 March 2016 Ralf Christoph Bernd Schmidt Udo Steinberner Wolfgang Dilla Reetta Karinen 2007 Glycerol Ullmann s Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry 7th ed Wiley pp 1 16 doi 10 1002 14356007 a12 477 pub2 ISBN 978 3527306732 Erik Lassner Wolf Dieter Schubert Eberhard Luderitz Hans Uwe Wolf 2007 Tungsten Tungsten Alloys and Tungsten Compounds Ullmann s Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry 7th ed Wiley pp 1 37 doi 10 1002 14356007 a27 229 ISBN 978 3527306732 Werner Haller Hermann Onusseit Gerhard Gierenz Werner Gruber Richard D Rich Gunter Henke Lothar Thiele Horst Hoffmann Dieter Dausmann Riza Nur Ozelli Udo Windhovel Hans Peter Sattler Wolfgang Dierichs Gunter Tauber Michael Hirthammer Christoph Matz Matthew Holloway David Melody Ernst Ulrich Rust Ansgar van Halteren 2007 Adhesives Ullmann s Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry 7th ed Wiley pp 1 70 doi 10 1002 14356007 a01 221 ISBN 978 3527306732 F L Marten 2002 Vinyl Alcohol Polymers Kirk Othmer Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology 5th ed Wiley p 26 doi 10 1002 0471238961 2209142513011820 a01 pub2 ISBN 0471238961 a b Robert N Proctor 2012 Golden Holocaust Origins of the Cigarette Catastrophe and the Case for Abolition Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 9780520270169 Ernst L Wynder 1977 Interrelationship of Smoking to Other Variables and Preventive Approaches in Murray E Jarvik Joseph W Cullen Ellen R Gritz Thomas M Vogt Louis Jolyon West eds Research on Smoking Behavior PDF NIDA Research Monograph vol 17 pp 67 95 PMID 417264 archived from the original PDF on 23 July 2015 retrieved 21 October 2015 K Rothwell et al 1999 Health effects of interactions between tobacco use and exposure to other agents Environmental Health Criteria World Health Organization Lee Peter N Sanders Edward 1 December 2004 Does increased cigarette consumption nullify any reduction in lung cancer risk associated with low tar filter cigarettes Inhalation Toxicology 16 13 817 833 doi 10 1080 08958370490490185 ISSN 0895 8378 PMID 15513814 S2CID 22468291 Jerome L Schwartz 1977 Smoking Cures Ways to Kick an Unhealthy Habit in Murray E Jarvik Joseph W Cullen Ellen R Gritz Thomas M Vogt Louis Jolyon West eds Research on Smoking Behavior PDF NIDA Research Monograph vol 17 pp 308 336 archived from the original PDF on 23 July 2015 retrieved 21 October 2015 Michael A H Russell 1977 Smoking Problems An Overview in Murray E Jarvik Joseph W Cullen Ellen R Gritz Thomas M Vogt Louis Jolyon West eds Research on Smoking Behavior PDF NIDA Research Monograph vol 17 pp 13 34 archived from the original PDF on 23 July 2015 retrieved 21 October 2015 Anthony J Alberg Jonathan M Samet 2010 Epidemiology of Lung Cancer in Robert J Mason V Courtney Broaddus Thomas R Martin Talmadge E King Jr Dean E Schraufnagel John F Murray Jay A Nadel eds Murray and Nadel s Textbook of Respiratory Medicine vol 1 5th ed Saunders ISBN 978 1 4160 4710 0 Neal L Benowitz Paul G Brunetta 2010 Smoking Hazards and Cessation in Robert J Mason V Courtney Broaddus Thomas R Martin Talmadge E King Jr Dean E Schraufnagel John F Murray Jay A Nadel eds Murray and Nadel s Textbook of Respiratory Medicine vol 1 5th ed Saunders ISBN 978 1 4160 4710 0 a b Novotny TE Lum K Smith E et al 2009 Cigarettes butts and the case for an environmental policy on hazardous cigarette waste International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 6 5 1691 705 doi 10 3390 ijerph6051691 PMC 2697937 PMID 19543415 The world litters 4 5 trillion cigarette butts a year Can we stop this The Houston Chronicle 12 May 2010 Retrieved 16 September 2014 Frederic Beaudry 3 July 2019 Are Cigarette Butts Biodegradable treehugger com Retrieved 31 August 2022 Yadav Nisha Hakkarainen Minna 2021 Degradable or not Cellulose acetate as a model for complicated interplay between structure environment and degradation Chemosphere 265 128731 Bibcode 2021Chmsp 265l8731Y doi 10 1016 j chemosphere 2020 128731 PMID 33127118 Cantu Aaron 12 February 2014 New Green Cigarette Butts Biodegrade Within Days And Can Even Sprout Into Grass The company Greenbutts is manufacturing a new filter to address most common litter problem AlterNet Chamas Ali 2020 Degradation Rates of Plastics in the Environment ACS Sustainable Chemistry amp Engineering 8 9 3494 3511 doi 10 1021 acssuschemeng 9b06635 Moriwaki Hiroshi Kitajima Shiori Katahira Kenshi 2009 Waste on the roadside poi sute waste Its distribution and elution potential of pollutants into environment Waste Management 29 3 1192 1197 doi 10 1016 j wasman 2008 08 017 hdl 10091 3192 PMID 18851907 Slaughter E Gersberg RM Watanabe K Rudolph J Stransky C Novotny TE 2011 Toxicity of cigarette butts and their chemical components to marine and freshwater fish Tobacco Control 20 Suppl 1 25 29 doi 10 1136 tc 2010 040170 PMC 3088407 PMID 21504921 Accidents fires Price of littering goes beyond fines Washington State of Washington Department of Ecology 1 June 2004 Archived from the original on 17 October 2016 Retrieved 19 September 2016 Minzae L Gil Pyo K Hyeon DS Soomin P Jongheop Y 2014 Preparation of energy storage material derived from a used cigarette filter for a supercapacitor electrode Nanotechnology 25 34 34 Bibcode 2014Nanot 25H5601L doi 10 1088 0957 4484 25 34 345601 PMID 25092115 S2CID 8692351 No more butts biodegradable filters a step to boot litter problem Environmental Health News 14 August 2012 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cigarette filter amp oldid 1150029319, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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