Title: Voluntary Respirator Use
1Voluntary Respirator Use Respirator Cartridge
Change Schedules - C. D. Jones, 4/28/00
- Everything you wanted to know, in less than one
hour Ill primarily review OSHA material and
some Navy stuff - Most of the OSHA information comes from two
sources - (a) 29 CFR 1910.134 - OSHA Respirator Standard
(http//www.osha-slc.gov/OshStd_data/1910_0134.htm
l) (effective 4/8/98) and - (b) OSHA Directive CPL 2-0.120 - Inspection
procedures for the Respiratory Protection
Standard (http//www.osha-slc.gov/OshDoc/Directive
_data/CPL_2-0_120.html) - Most of the Navy stuff comes from the OPNAVINST
5100.23E
2How do you determine if respirator use is
necessary? You need to evaluate your workplace
- 29 CFR 1910.134 (d)(1)(iii) - The employer shall
identify and evaluate the respiratory hazard(s)
in the workplace this evaluation shall include a
reasonable estimate of employee exposures to
respiratory hazard(s) and an identification of
the contaminant's chemical state and physical
form. Where the employer cannot identify or
reasonably estimate the employee exposure, the
employer shall consider the atmosphere to be
IDLH. - So, youve got to look at your workplace and see
if you need them.
3How do you determine if respirator use is
necessary? You need to evaluate your workplace
- The Navy implies this be done in Chapter 8 (not
Chapter 15) of the 23E and spells it out in
Chapter A3 of the 19C
4So youve checked your workplace and .
- You determined that respirators arent necessary
- Some folks may want to wear respirators anyway
(because they like to ?) - You can consider allowing voluntary respirator
use - What exactly is voluntary respirator use?
5Voluntary respirator use -
- OSHA - 29 CFR 1910.134 (c)(2)(i) - an employer
may provide respirators at the request of
employees or permit employees to use their own
respirators, if the employer determines that such
respirator use will not in itself create a
hazard. If the employer determines that any
voluntary respirator use is permissible, the
employer shall provide the respirator users with
the information contained in Appendix D
(mandatory appendix) to this section
("Information for Employees Using Respirators
When Not Required Under the Standard")
61910.134 (Mandatory) Appendix D -
- If your employer provides respirators for your
voluntary use, or if you provide your own
respirator you should do the following - 1. Read and heed all instructions on use,
maintenance, cleaning and care, and warnings
regarding the respirators limitations. - 2. Choose respirators certified for use to
protect against the contaminant of concern. NIOSH
certifies respirators (more on this in a few
minutes).
71910.134 (Mandatory) Appendix D -
- 3. Do not wear your respirator into atmospheres
containing contaminants for which your respirator
is not designed to protect against. For example,
a respirator designed to filter dust particles
will not protect you against gases, vapors, or
very small solid particles of fumes or smoke. - 4. Keep track of your respirator so that you do
not mistakenly use someone else's respirator.
8Voluntary Respirator Use -
- (And) 29 CFR 1910.134 (c)(2)(ii) - In addition,
the employer must establish and implement those
elements of a written respiratory protection
program necessary to ensure that any employee
using a respirator voluntarily is medically able
to use that respirator (c)(1)(ii), and that the
respirator is cleaned, stored, and maintained
(c)(1)(v) so that its use does not present a
health hazard to the user. - The medical evaluation is described in part (e),
cleaning etc. in part (h) - There is an exception to the above
9Voluntary Respirator Use -
- 29 CFR 1910.134 (c)(2)(ii) - Exception Employers
are not required to include in a written
respiratory protection program those employees
whose only use of respirators involves the
voluntary use of filtering facepieces (dust
masks). - Filtering facepieces - those inexpensive masks
that all the hardware stores sell? Maybe. For
dusts only? Maybe. - OSHA Directive CPL 2-0.120 states that use of
elastomeric facepieces, even when voluntary,
requires inclusion of all of the elements of a
respirator program
10Voluntary use - what kind of respirator can you
use if you dont really need one? Hmmm .
- Depends on who you ask
- Since the OSHA standard says you can use a
filtering facepiece, which may or may not be a
respirator, does that thing on your face need to
be approved by the National Institute of
Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)? - OSHA standard doesnt require this, but Appendix
D (which is mandatory) seems to. Choose
respirators certified for use against the
contaminant of concern. It then states that
NIOSH certifies respirators.
11Voluntary use - what kind of respirator can you
use if you dont really need one?
- OSHAs compliance directive CPL 2-0.120,
Inspection procedures for the Respiratory
Protection Standard, contradicts Appendix D - It states NIOSH-approved respirators are
strongly recommended, but they are not required
for voluntary use. - Good practice - only use NIOSH-approved
respirators, and throw away the rest
12Does the Navy allow voluntary respirator use?
- Nope.
- 23E, Chapter 15, 1503 g. - Navy policy is that
activities shall not establish voluntary
respiratory use programs as provided for by
reference 15-3 (29 CFR 1910.134) - Thats too bad .
13Any questions about voluntary respirator use?
- When I asked for questions I meant easy ones .
- OK, what about change schedules .
14Respirator Cartridge / Canister Change Schedules
- Not required by 29 CFR 1910.134 when using
respirators for protection against particulates
(d)(3)(iv) you change these when you cant
breathe through them - Required when using respirators for protection
against gases and vapors in most circumstances.
Section (d)(3)(B)(2) states you either need an
end of service life indicator (ESLI), or a change
schedule based on objective info or data that
will ensure that (they) are changed before the
end of their service life - There are very few ESLI cartridges available
15Respirator Cartridge / Canister Change Schedules
- OSHA has previously published change schedules
for some chemicals in some of their specific
standards for acrylonitrile, benzene, butadiene,
formaldehyde, vinyl chloride, and methylene
chloride - Change schedules for all other gases and vapors
must be established and implemented by the
employer - Once you implement an effective change schedule,
you can use air-purifying gas and vapor
respirators
16Change schedules - something new under the sun
- In the old days you changed chemical cartridges
when you experienced breakthrough, when you
detected odors or some other warning property
inside the facepiece - The new standard prohibits the use of warning
properties as the sole basis for determining
change schedules
17Change schedules -
- 29 CFR 1910.134 (d)(3)(iii)(B)(2) - If there is
no ESLI appropriate for conditions in the
employer's workplace, the employer implements a
change schedule for canisters and cartridges that
is based on objective information or data that
will ensure that canisters and cartridges are
changed before the end of their service life. The
employer shall describe in the respirator program
the information and data relied upon and the
basis for the canister and cartridge change
schedule and the basis for reliance on the data.
18Navys change schedule policy
- Section 1505 a. - Activities (the folks we
survey) shall - (1) implement a change schedule for chemical
canisters / cartridges based on objective
information or data that will ensure that
canisters and cartridges are changed before the
end of their service life. Activities must
describe this data, along with the logic for
relying on the change schedule, in their
respirator programs. - (2) Change chemical canisters / cartridges
according to manufacturers directions, or based
on objective data obtained as indicated in
reference 15-4 (the NEHC Technical Manual) - (3) Identify respirator cartridges and canisters
by the information provided on the approval
labels in lieu of color coding - Activities must do it, not use (strange, isnt
it?)
19Some things that influence cartridge life
- Single or multiple contaminants in the workplace
- Concentration of the chemical in the workplace
- Physical properties of the chemical
- Adsorbing capacity of the cartridge sorbent
- Relative humidity in the workplace
- Temperature in the workplace
- Workers breathing rate
20First step - determine the chemical concentration
in the workplace two ways to do this
- Air sampling - collect enough samples in the
workplace to ballpark personnel exposures. Ideal
situation - multiple samples on multiple people
on multiple days multiple statistical tests can
be used (geometric mean, 95th percentile, etc.).
Worst case sampling is next best choice - Modeling - cumbersome, not warm and fuzzy. Most
are based on the exposure from a single
contaminant - Air sampling is (my) preferred approach
- Both air sampling and modeling are strongly
influenced by high humidity
21Next step - estimate breakthrough time for the
calculated chemical concentration
- Use respirator cartridge manufacturers chemical
cartridge service life calculator. Here are two,
there are more - MSA Cartridge Life Expectancy Calculator http//w
ww.msanet.com/safetyproducts/cartlife/index.html - 3M Respirator Service Life Software Version
2.0 http//csrv.3m.com/CSRV/SilverStream/Pages/pg
CsrvUserProfile.html - Use OSHAs Advisor Genius calculator
- http//www.osha-slc.gov/SLTC/respiratory_advisor/a
dvisor_genius_wood/advisor_genius.html
22To determine cartridge change schedules, youll
need info about the chemical and the workplace
- Chemical information
- concentration
- occupational exposure limit
- molecular weight
- specific gravity or density
- boiling point
- vapor pressure
- Workplace information
- temperature
- relative humidity
- breathing rate of personnel
- safety factor for the workplace
23Example cartridge change schedule for single
chemical, toluene, using MSAs on-line calculator
- Personnel wearing MSA Comfo Classic facepiece
with an Advantage 200 GMA cartridge want to
protect against toluene estimated toluene
concentration is 36 ppm PEL is 200 ppm
workplace temp is 75 degrees F, relative humidity
is 75, barometric pressure is 760 mm Hg
moderate breathing rate of 60 lpm (low 30,
high 85) breakthrough concentration ( of the
PEL that triggers cartridge change) 10 - Estimated breakthrough time for this environment
under these conditions is 1738 min, or 29 hrs
24Example cartridge change schedule for single
chemical, toluene, using MSAs on-line calculator
- That means 29 hours of use in this environment,
if you select 10 of the toluene PEL of 200 ppm
as the level when you change the cartridge - What if you wanted to calculate a change schedule
using the ACGIH TLV of 50 ppm as your standard
instead of using the PEL? Or if you wanted to use
a fraction of the PEL? - MSAs calculator doesnt allow you to do this
- 3Ms calculator doesnt have much flexibility
either - Humidity presents a problem with most calculators
25Cartridge change schedules for a mixture of
chemicals are more difficult to calculate
- MSAs on-line calculator wont calculate them
- MSA rep says there are ways to derive them using
the vapor pressure of the individual chemicals in
the mixture - 3Ms calculator will calculate a change schedule
for a mixture of some chemicals probably does
not have all the selections you are interested in
on their pull-down menu - Bottom line - a change schedule for a single
stressor is difficult to do, and for a mixture is
even more difficult
26Example cartridge change schedule for multiple
chemicals, using 3Ms downloaded calculator
- Try this at home or at your desk, after you
download the software from 3M it (the download
and the use of the software) is easy to do - Your results probably wont be what you like them
to be you wont get definitive answers, probably
because more research needs to be done - The default response of throw them away after
initial use is probably the best position to
espouse.
27OSHAs suggestions for mixed chemical environments
- For mixtures in which not all of the components
are listed, calculate using the most
characteristic component of the mixture - Do not use chemical cartridges to protect
personnel from chemicals that have breakthrough
times less than 15 minutes - Do not reuse cartridges if a chemical
constituent has a boiling point of less than 65
degrees C If b.p. lt65, the chemical tends to
migrate within the cartridge (for example,
acetone, which has a b.p. 56)
28OSHAs suggestions for mixed chemical environments
- If compounds in the mixture vary by two orders of
magnitude, the service life may be based on the
contaminant with the shortest breakthrough time
29The Navys official suggestions regarding change
schedule calculations
- There arent any. Surprise!
- Dave Spelce at NEHC proposed a very complicated
procedure that involved sampling the work
environment, using the 95th percentile plus a
safety factor as an exposure number to hang your
hat onto then sampling in the field behind the
cartridge to determine if and when breakthrough
occurred. This was not smiled upon by the powers
that be - Official NMCP IH Dept suggestions - see the top
line - Weve only had since 4/8/98 to come up with them
.
30In conclusion .
- Remember Field of Dreams? If you build it, he
will come - Consider that OSHA built it when they built 29
CFR 1910.134 - Well just have to wait until he gets here .
- Thank you. Any questions?