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Respirator

A respirator is a device designed to protect the wearer from inhaling hazardous atmospheres including fumes, vapours, gases and particulate matter such as dusts and airborne pathogens such as viruses. There are two main categories of respirators: the air-purifying respirator, in which respirable air is obtained by filtering a contaminated atmosphere, and the air-supplied respirator, in which an alternate supply of breathable air is delivered. Within each category, different techniques are employed to reduce or eliminate noxious airborne contaminants.

White, disposable Standard N95 filtering facepiece respirator
A half-face elastomeric air-purifying respirator. This kind of respirator is reusable, with the filters being replaced periodically.
Lab worker wearing a powered air-purifying respirator

Air-purifying respirators range from relatively inexpensive, single-use, disposable face masks sometimes referred to as a filtering facepiece respirator to a more robust reusable model with replaceable cartridges called an elastomeric respirator. Powered air-purifying respirators (PAPR), use a pump or fan to constantly move air through a filter and supply purified air into a mask, helmet or hood.

Physical form edit

 
Types of respirators by physical form. Click to enlarge.

All respirators have some type of facepiece held to the wearer's head with straps, a cloth harness, or some other method. Facepieces come in many different styles and sizes to accommodate all types of face shapes. The differences in respirator designs impact the respirator assigned protection factors, i.e. the resulting degree of protection from specific kinds of hazards.[citation needed]

Respirators can have half-face forms that cover the bottom half of the face including the nose and mouth, and full-face forms that cover the entire face. Half-face respirators are only effective in environments where the contaminants are not toxic to the eyes or facial area. For example, someone who is spray painting could wear a half-face respirator, but someone who works with chlorine gas would have to wear a full-face respirator.[citation needed]

An escape respirator may have no component that would normally be described as a mask, and may use a bite-grip mouthpiece and nose clip instead.

Use edit

A wide range of industries use respirators including healthcare & pharmaceuticals, defense & public safety services (defense, firefighting & law enforcement), oil and gas industries, manufacturing (automotive, chemical, metal fabrication, food and beverage, wood working, paper and pulp), mining, construction, agriculture and forestry, cement production, power generation, shipbuilding, and the textile industry.[1]

Respirators require user training in order to provide proper protection.

User seal check edit

Each time a wearer dons a respirator, they must perform a seal check to be sure that they have an airtight seal to the face so that air does not leak around the edges of the respirator. (PAPR respirators may not require this because they don't necessarily seal to the face.) This check is different than the periodic fit test that is performed by specially trained personnel using testing equipment. Filtering facepiece respirators are typically checked by cupping the hands over the facepiece while exhaling (positive pressure check) or inhaling (negative pressure check) and observing any air leakage around the facepiece. Elastomeric respirators are checked in a similar manner, except the wearer blocks the airways through the inlet valves (negative pressure check) or exhalation valves (positive pressure check) while observing the flexing of the respirator or air leakage. Manufacturers have different methods for performing seal checks and wearers should consult the specific instructions for the model of respirator they are wearing. Some models of respirators or filter cartridges have special buttons or other mechanisms built into them to facilitate seal checks.[2]

Fit testing edit

Most types of respirators depend upon forming a good seal between the respirator body and the face of the wearer. Fit testing procedures have been developed to ensure that the respirator is appropriate for the wearer and the wearer's donning technique is capable of creating an adequate seal.[3] Poor fit can have a negative impact on the respirator's overall filtering effectiveness by as much as 65%.[4] A study on respirator effectiveness conducted in Beijing found that facial fit was the primary contributor to total inward leakage (TIL), based on a test of nine different models.[5] Facial hair such as a beard can interfere with proper fit.[6]

Qualitative fit testing typically subjects the wearer to an atmosphere containing an aerosol that can be detected by the wearer, such as saccharin or isoamyl acetate, with the wearer reporting whether detectable levels of the aerosol has penetrated into the breathing area. Quantitative fit testing typically uses a specially prepared respirator with an inserted probe. The respirator is donned, and aerosol concentrations inside and outside of the mask are compared and used to determine a numerical fit factor. Typical room atmosphere contains sufficient particulates to perform the test, but aerosol generators can be used to improve the test accuracy.

 
Workplace protection factor (PF) of filtering facepiece, measured in real time with two optical dust meters. In-facepiece dust concentration is changed dozens of times in a matter of minutes due to changes of the size of the gaps between the mask and face.[7]

A U.S. Department of Labor study[8] showed that in almost 40 thousand American enterprises, the requirements for the correct use of respirators are not always met.

Experts note that in practice it is difficult to achieve elimination of occupational morbidity with the help of respirators:

It is well known how ineffective ... trying to compensate the harmful workplace conditions with ... the use of respirators by employees.[9]

Unfortunately, the only certain way of reducing the exceedance fraction to zero is to ensure that Co (note: Co - concentration of pollutants in the breathing zone) never exceeds the PEL value.[10]

The very limited field tests of air-purifying respirator performance in the workplace show that respirators may perform far less well under actual use conditions than is indicated by laboratory fit factors. We are not yet able to predict the level of protection accurately; it will vary from person to person, and it may also vary from one use to the next for the same individual. In contrast, we can predict the effectiveness of engineering controls, and we can monitor their performance with commercially available state-of-the-art devices.[11]

Contrast with surgical mask edit

 
An infographic on the difference between surgical masks and N95 respirators

A surgical mask is a loose-fitting, disposable device that creates a physical barrier between the mouth and nose of the wearer and potential contaminants in the immediate environment. If worn properly, a surgical mask is meant to help block large-particle droplets, splashes, sprays, or splatter that may contain viruses and bacteria. Surgical masks may also help reduce exposure from the wearer's saliva and respiratory secretions to others, especially during surgical procedures.[12]

A surgical mask, by design, does not filter or block very small particles from the outside air that may be transmitted by coughs, sneezes, or certain medical procedures to the wearer. Surgical masks also do not provide complete protection from germs and other contaminants because of the loose fit between the surface of the face mask and the face.[12]

Collection efficiency of surgical mask filters can range from less than 10% to nearly 90% for different manufacturers' masks when measured using the test parameters for NIOSH certification. However, a study found that even for surgical masks with "good" filters, 80–100% of subjects failed an OSHA-accepted qualitative fit test, and a quantitative test showed 12–25% leakage.[13]

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommends surgical masks in procedures where there can be an aerosol generation from the wearer, if small aerosols can produce a disease to the patient.[14]

Surgical N95 edit

 
Astronaut Kate Rubins wearing a 3M 1860 "surgical N95" respirator

Some N95 respirators have also been cleared by the U.S. National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) and U.S. Food and Drug Administration as surgical and are labeled "surgical N95", "medical respirators," or "healthcare respirators". These protect the patient and others from the wearer's respiratory emissions (as a surgical mask would) as well as protect the wearer from airborne particulates and aerosols (as a standard N95 respirator). Unlike a standard N95 respirator, FDA-cleared "healthcare respirators" also provide protection from high-pressure streams or jets of bodily fluid, such as blood.[15][16]

The CDC recommends the use of respirators with at least N95 certification to protect the wearer from inhalation of infectious particles including Mycobacterium tuberculosis, avian influenza, severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS), pandemic influenza, and Ebola.[17]

Escape respirators edit

 
A simple Dräger escape respirator. This model has no hood, and instead comes with noseclips to ensure the wearer breathes only through the filter.

Escape respirators or smoke hoods such as Air-Purifying Escape Respirators are for use by the general public for chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear (CBRN) terrorism incidents.[citation needed] The American National Standards Institute (ANSI) and the International Safety Equipment Association (ISEA) established the American National Standard for Air-Purifying Respiratory Protective Smoke Escape Devices to define both test criteria and approval methods for fire/smoke escape hoods. ANSI/ISEA Standard 110 provides design guidance to manufacturers of Respiratory Protective Smoke Escape Devices (RPED) in the form of performance requirements and testing procedures. The standard covers certification, ISO registration for the manufacturer, associated test methods, labeling, conditioning requirements, independent process and quality control audits, and follow-up inspection programs.[18]

ANSI/ISEA 110 was prepared by members of the ISEA RPED group, in consultation with testing laboratories and was reviewed by a consensus panel representing users, health and safety professionals and government representatives.[citation needed] The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission uses ANSI/ISEA 110 as the benchmark in their testing of fire escape masks.[citation needed]

Air-purifying respirators edit

Air-purifying respirators are respirators that draw in the surrounding air and purify it before it is breathed (unlike air-supplying respirators, which are sealed systems, with no air intake, like those used underwater). Air-purifying respirators are used against particulates, gases, and vapors that are at atmospheric concentrations less than immediately dangerous to life and health. They may be negative-pressure respirators driven by the wearer's inhalation and exhalation, or positive-pressure units such as powered air-purifying respirators (PAPRs).

Air-purifying respirators may use one or both of two kinds of filtration: mechanical filters retain particulate matter, while chemical cartridges remove gases, volatile organic compounds (VOCs), and other vapors. Additionally, air-purifying respirators may come in many forms: filtering facepiece respirators consist solely of a disposable mechanical filter; elastomeric respirators are reusable but have replaceable filters attached to the mask; and powered air-purifying respirators have a battery-powered blower that moves the airflow through the filters.

According to the NIOSH Respirator Selection Logic, air-purifying respirators are recommended for concentrations of hazardous particulates or gases that are greater than the relevant occupational exposure limit but less than the immediately dangerous to life or health level and the manufacturer's maximum use concentration, subject to the respirator having a sufficient assigned protection factor. For substances hazardous to the eyes, a respirator equipped with a full facepiece, helmet, or hood is recommended. Air-purifying respirators are not effective during firefighting, in oxygen-deficient atmosphere, or in an unknown atmosphere; in these situations a self-contained breathing apparatus is recommended instead.[19]

Types of filtration edit

Mechanical filter edit

A video describing N95 certification testing

Mechanical filter respirators retain particulate matter such as dust created during woodworking or metal processing, when contaminated air is passed through the filter material. Since the filters cannot be cleaned and reused and have a limited lifespan, cost and disposability are key factors. Single-use, disposable and replaceable cartridge models exist.[citation needed]

Mechanical filters remove contaminants from air in several ways: interception when particles following a line of flow in the airstream come within one radius of a fiber and adhere to it; impaction, when larger particles unable to follow the curving contours of the airstream are forced to embed in one of the fibers directly; this increases with diminishing fiber separation and higher air flow velocity; by diffusion, where gas molecules collide with the smallest particles, especially those below 100 nm in diameter, which are thereby impeded and delayed in their path through the filter, increasing the probability that particles will be stopped by either of the previous two mechanisms; and by using an electrostatic charge that attracts and holds particles on the filter surface.

There are many different filtration standards that vary by jurisdiction. In the United States, the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health defines the categories of particulate filters according to their NIOSH air filtration rating. The most common of these are the N95 respirator, which filters at least 95% of airborne particles but is not resistant to oil.

Other categories filter 99% or 99.97% of particles, or have varying degrees of resistance to oil.[20]

In the European Union, European standard EN 143 defines the 'P' classes of particle filters that can be attached to a face mask, while European standard EN 149 defines classes of "filtering half masks" or "filtering facepieces", usually called FFP masks.[21]

According to 3M, the filtering media in respirators made according to the following standards are similar to U.S. N95 or European FFP2 respirators, however, the construction of the respirators themselves, such as providing a proper seal to the face, varies considerably. (For example, US NIOSH-approved respirators never include earloops because they don't provide enough support to establish a reliable, airtight seal.) Those standards include the Chinese KN95, Australian / New Zealand P2, Korean 1st Class also referred to as KF94, and Japanese DS.[22]

Chemical cartridge edit

 
Combined gas and particulate respirator filter, type BKF (БКФ), for protection against acid gases. It has a transparent body and a special sorbent that changes color upon saturation. This color change may be used for timely replacement of respirators' filters (like an end-of-service-life indicator, ESLI).

Chemical cartridge respirators use a cartridge to remove gases, volatile organic compounds (VOCs), and other vapors from breathing air by adsorption, absorption, or chemisorption. A typical organic vapor respirator cartridge is a metal or plastic case containing from 25 to 40 grams of sorption media such as activated charcoal or certain resins. The service life of the cartridge varies based, among other variables, on the carbon weight and molecular weight of the vapor and the cartridge media, the concentration of vapor in the atmosphere, the relative humidity of the atmosphere, and the breathing rate of the respirator wearer. When filter cartridges become saturated or particulate accumulation within them begins to restrict air flow, they must be changed.[23]

If the concentration of harmful gases is immediately dangerous to life or health, in workplaces covered by the Occupational Safety and Health Act the US Occupational Safety and Health Administration specifies the use of air-supplied respirators except when intended solely for escape during emergencies.[24] NIOSH also discourages their use under such conditions.[25]

Form factors edit

Filtering facepiece edit

 
Filtering facepiece half mask with exhalation valve (class: FFP3)

Filtering facepiece respirators are discarded when they become unsuitable for further use due to considerations of hygiene, excessive resistance, or physical damage.[26] These are typically simple, light, single-piece, half-face masks and employ the first three mechanical filter mechanisms in the list above to remove particulates from the air stream. The most common of these is the white, disposable Standard N95 variety; another type is the blue, Surgical N95 mask. It is discarded after single use or some extended period depending on the contaminant.

Elastomeric edit

 
New York Police Department officer wearing a 3M elastomeric respirator with P100-standard particulate filters in the aftermath of the 2007 New York City steam explosion

Elastomeric respirators are reusable because the facepiece is cleaned and reused, but the filter cartridges are discarded and replaced when they become unsuitable for further use.[26] These are replaceable-cartridge, multiple-use models. Typically one or two cartridges attach securely to a mask which has built into it a corresponding number of valves for inhalation and one for exhalation.

Powered air-purifying respirators edit

Powered air-purifying respirators (PAPRs) have a battery-powered blower that moves the airflow through the filters.[26] They take contaminated air, remove a certain quantity of pollutants and return the air to the user. There are different units for different environments. The units consist of a powered fan which forces incoming air through one or more filters to the user for breathing. The fan and filters may be carried by the user or they may be remotely mounted and the user breathes the air through tubing.[citation needed]

The filter type must be matched to the contaminants that need to be removed. Some PAPR's are designed to remove fine particulate matter, while others are suitable for working with volatile organic compounds as those in spray paints. These must have their filter elements replaced more often than a particulate filter.[citation needed]

Atmosphere-supplying respirators edit

These respirators do not purify the ambient air, but supply breathing gas from another source. The three types are the self contained breathing apparatus, in which a compressed air cylinder is worn by the wearer; the supplied air respirators, where a hose supplies air from a stationary source; and combination respirators that integrate both types.[27]

According to the NIOSH Respirator Selection Logic, atmosphere-supplying are recommended for concentrations of hazardous particulates or gases that are greater than the immediately dangerous to life or health level; where the required assigned protection factor exceeds those of air-purifying respirators; during firefighting (self-contained breathing apparatuses only); in oxygen-deficient atmosphere; and in an unknown atmosphere.[19]

Self-contained breathing apparatus edit

A self-contained breathing apparatus (SCBA) typically has three main components: a high-pressure air cylinder (e.g., 2200 psi to 4500 psi), a pressure gauge and regulator, and an inhalation connection (mouthpiece, mouth mask or full face mask), connected together and mounted to a carrying frame or a harness with adjustable shoulder straps and belt so it can be worn on the back. There are two kinds of SCBA: open circuit and closed circuit. Most modern SCBAs are open-circuit.[citation needed]

Open-circuit industrial breathing sets are filled with filtered, compressed air. The compressed air passes through a regulator, is inhaled and exhaled out of the circuit, quickly depleting the supply of air. Air cylinders are made of aluminum, steel, or of a composite construction like fiberglass-wrapped aluminum. The "positive pressure" type is common, which supplies a steady stream of air to stop fumes or smoke from leaking into the mask. Other SCBA's are of the "demand" type, which only supply air when the regulator senses the user inhaling. All fire departments and those working in toxic environments use the positive pressure SCBA for safety reasons.[citation needed]

The closed-circuit type SCBA filters, supplements, and recirculates exhaled gas like a rebreather. It is used when a longer-duration supply of breathing gas is needed, such as in mine rescue and in long tunnels, and going through passages too narrow for a large open-circuit air cylinder.[citation needed]

Supplied air respirator edit

Supplied air respirators make use of a hose to deliver air from a stationary source. It provides clean air for long periods of time and are light weight for the user, although it limits user mobility. They are normally used when there are extended work periods required in atmospheres that are not immediately dangerous to life and health (IDLH).[27]

Disadvantages edit

Extended use of respirators can result in higher levels of carbon dioxide than recommended in a work environment,[28][29][30][31][32][33] and can lead to headaches,[34] dermatitis and acne.[35]

Regulation edit

The choice and use of respirators in developed countries is regulated by national legislation. To ensure that employers choose respirators correctly, and perform high-quality respiratory protection programs, various guides and textbooks have been developed:

For standard filter classes used in respirators, see Mechanical filter (respirator)#Filtration standards.

History edit

Earliest records to 19th century edit

 
Plague doctor

The history of protective respiratory equipment can be traced back as far as the first century, when Pliny the Elder (c. 23 AD–79) described using animal bladder skins to protect workers in Roman mines from red lead oxide dust.[61] In the 16th century, Leonardo da Vinci suggested that a finely woven cloth dipped in water could protect sailors from a toxic weapon made of powder that he had designed.[62]

In 1785, Jean-François Pilâtre de Rozier invented a respirator.

Alexander von Humboldt introduced a primitive respirator in 1799 when he worked as a mining engineer in Prussia.[63] Practically all respirators in the early 18th century consisted of a bag placed completely over the head, fastened around the throat with windows through which the wearer could see. Some were rubber, some were made of rubberized fabric, and still others of impregnated fabric, but in most cases a tank of compressed air or a reservoir of air under slight pressure was carried by the wearer to supply the necessary breathing air. In some devices certain means were provided for the adsorption of carbon dioxide in exhaled air and the rebreathing of the same air many times; in other cases valves allowed exhalation of used air.[citation needed]

Julius Jeffreys first used the word "respirator" as a mask in 1836.[64] The mask worked by capturing moisture and warmth in exhaled air in a grid of fine metal wires. Inhaled air then was warmed and moistened as it passed through the same metal grid, providing relief to people with lung diseases. The Respirator became popular, and was mentioned in the literature of the day, including in the writings of Elizabeth Gaskell, William Makepeace Thackeray and Charles Dickens.

 
Woodcut of Stenhouse's mask
 
"How a Man may Breathe Safely in a Poisonous Atmosphere", an apparatus providing oxygen while using caustic soda to absorb carbon dioxide, 1909

In 1848, the first US patent for an air-purifying respirator was granted to Lewis P. Haslett[65] for his 'Haslett's Lung Protector,' which filtered dust from the air using one-way clapper valves and a filter made of moistened wool or a similar porous substance.[66] Following Haslett, a long string of patents were issued for air purifying devices, including patents for the use of cotton fibers as a filtering medium, for charcoal and lime absorption of poisonous vapors, and for improvements on the eyepiece and eyepiece assembly.[citation needed] Hutson Hurd patented a cup-shaped mask in 1879 which became widespread in industrial use, and Hurd's H.S. Cover Company was still in business in the 1970s.[67]

Inventors in Europe included John Stenhouse, a Scottish chemist, who investigated the power of charcoal in its various forms, to capture and hold large volumes of gas. He built one of the first respirators able to remove toxic gases from the air, paving the way for activated charcoal to become the most widely used filter for respirators.[68] Irish physicist John Tyndall took Stenhouse's mask, added a filter of cotton wool saturated with lime, glycerin, and charcoal, and in 1871 invented a 'fireman's respirator', a hood that filtered smoke and gas from air, which he exhibited at a meeting of the Royal Society in London in 1874.[69] Also in 1874, Samuel Barton patented a device that 'permitted respiration in places where the atmosphere is charged with noxious gases, or vapors, smoke, or other impurities.'[70][71] German Bernhard Loeb patented several inventions to 'purify foul or vitiated air,' and counted the Brooklyn Fire Department among his customers.[citation needed]

A predecessor of the N95 was a design by Doctor Lien-teh Wu who was working for the Chinese Imperial Court in the fall of 1910, which was the first that protected users from bacteria in empirical testing. Subsequent respirators were reusable but bulky and uncomfortable. In the 1970s, the Bureau of Mines and NIOSH developed standards for single-use respirators, and the first N95 respirator was developed by 3M and approved in 1972.[72]

World War I edit

The first recorded response and defense against chemical attacks using respirators occurred during the Second Battle of Ypres on the Western Front in World War I. It was the first time Germany used chemical weapons on a large scale releasing 168 tons of chlorine gas over a four-mile (6 km) front killing around 6,000 troops within ten minutes through asphyxiation. The gas being denser than air flowed downwards forcing troops to climb out of their trenches. Reserve Canadian troops, who were away from the attack, used urine-soaked cloths as primitive respirators. A Canadian soldier realized that the ammonia in urine would react with the chlorine, neutralizing it, and that the water would dissolve the chlorine, allowing soldiers to breathe through the gas.[citation needed]

21st century edit

China normally makes 10 million masks per day, about half of the world production. During the COVID-19 pandemic, 2,500 factories were converted to produce 116 million daily.[73]

During the COVID-19 pandemic, people in the United States, and in a lot of countries in the world, were urged to make their own cloth masks due to the widespread shortage of commercial masks.[74]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Respirator use and practices". U.S. Bureau of Labour Statistics.
  2. ^ "Filtering out Confusion: Frequently Asked Questions about Respiratory Protection, User Seal Check (2018)" (PDF). NIOSH. Retrieved 8 December 2021.
  3. ^ "29 CFR 1910.134 Appendix A: Fit Testing Procedures (Mandatory)". United States Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA).
  4. ^ "Puraka Clean Air Resources for Particulate Pollution & Smoke". www.cleanairresources.com. Retrieved 26 February 2019.
  5. ^ Cherrie, John W; Apsley, Andrew; Cowie, Hilary; Steinle, Susanne; Mueller, William; Lin, Chun; Horwell, Claire J; Sleeuwenhoek, Anne; Loh, Miranda (June 2018). "Effectiveness of face masks used to protect Beijing residents against particulate air pollution". Occupational and Environmental Medicine. 75 (6): 446–452. doi:10.1136/oemed-2017-104765. ISSN 1351-0711. PMC 5969371. PMID 29632130.
  6. ^ "To Beard or not to Beard? That's a good Question! | | Blogs | CDC". 2 November 2017. Retrieved 27 February 2020.
  7. ^ Lee, Shu-An, Sergey Grinshpun (2005). "Laboratory and Field Evaluation of a New Personal Sampling System for Assessing the Protection Provided by the N95 Filtering Facepiece Respirators against Particles". The Annals of Occupational Hygiene. 49 (3): 245–257. doi:10.1093/annhyg/meh097. ISSN 0003-4878. PMID 15668259.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  8. ^ U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics. Respirator Usage in Private Sector Firms, 2001 (PDF). Morgantown, WV: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health. p. 273. Retrieved 22 January 2019.
  9. ^ Letavet A.A. [in Russian] (1973). Институт гигиены труда и профессиональных заболеваний в составе АМН СССР [Research Institute of industrial hygiene and occupational diseases of AMS USSR]. Occupational medicine and industrial ecology [Гигиена труда и профессиональные заболевания] (in Russian) (9): 1–7. ISSN 1026-9428.
  10. ^ M. Nicas & R. Spear (1992). "A Probability Model for Assessing Exposure among Respirator Wearers: Part II - Overexposure to Chronic versus Acute Toxicants". American Industrial Hygiene Association Journal. 53 (7): 419–426. doi:10.1080/15298669291359889. PMID 1496932. Retrieved 22 January 2018.
  11. ^ Edwin C. Hyatt (1984). "Respirators: How well do they really protect?". Journal of the International Society for Respiratory Protection. 2 (1): 6–19. ISSN 0892-6298. Retrieved 22 January 2018.
  12. ^ a b "N95 Respirators and Surgical Masks (Face Masks)". U.S. Food and Drug Administration. 11 March 2020. Retrieved 28 March 2020.   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  13. ^ Brosseau, Lisa; Ann, Roland Berry (14 October 2009). "N95 Respirators and Surgical Masks". NIOSH Science Blog. Retrieved 28 March 2020.   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  14. ^ "Isolation Precautions". U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 22 July 2019. Retrieved 9 February 2020.
  15. ^ "Respirator Trusted-Source Information: Ancillary Respirator Information". U.S. National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health. 26 January 2018. Retrieved 12 February 2020.
  16. ^ (PDF). June 2020. Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 July 2020. Retrieved 6 July 2020.
  17. ^ 2007 Guideline for Isolation Precautions: Preventing Transmission of Infectious Agents in Healthcare Settings (PDF). U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. July 2019. pp. 55–56. Retrieved 9 February 2020.
  18. ^ "International Safety Equipment Association". Safetyequipment.org. Retrieved 18 April 2010.
  19. ^ a b Bollinger, Nancy (1 October 2004). "NIOSH respirator selection logic". U.S. National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health: 5–16. doi:10.26616/NIOSHPUB2005100. Retrieved 20 April 2020.
  20. ^ Metzler, R; Szalajda, J (2011). "NIOSH Fact Sheet: NIOSH Approval Labels - Key Information to Protect Yourself" (PDF). DHHS (NIOSH) Publication No. 2011-179. ISSN 0343-6993.
  21. ^ https://www.hsa.ie/eng/Publications_and_Forms/Publications/Chemical_and_Hazardous_Substances/Respiratory%20Protective%20Equipment.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  22. ^ "Technical Bulletin: Comparison of FFP2, KN95, and N95 and Other Filtering Facepiece Respirator Classes" (PDF). 3M Personal Safety Division. January 2020.
  23. ^ The document describes the methods used previously and currently used to perform the timely replacement of cartridges in air purifying respirators.
  24. ^ OSHA standard 29 CFR 1910.134 "Respiratory Protection"
  25. ^ Bollinger, Nancy; et al. (2004). NIOSH Respirator Selection Logic. DHHS (NIOSH) Publication No. 2005-100. Cincinnati, Ohio: National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health. p. 32. doi:10.26616/NIOSHPUB2005100.
  26. ^ a b c "Respirator Trusted-Source Information: What are they?". U.S. National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health. 29 January 2018. Retrieved 27 March 2020.
  27. ^ a b "Respirator Selection: Air-purifying vs. Atmosphere-supplying Respirators". U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration. Retrieved 9 April 2020.
  28. ^ Mean values for several models; some models may provide a stronger exposure to carbon dioxide. For example, IDLH for CO2 = 4%, but filtering facepiese "AOSafety Pleats Plus" provided concentration up to 5.8%, source: E.J. Sinkule, J.B. Powell, F.L. Goss (2013). "Evaluation of N95 respirator use with a surgical mask cover: effects on breathing resistance and inhaled carbon dioxide". Annals of Occupational Hygiene. Oxford University Press. 57 (3): 384–398. doi:10.1093/annhyg/mes068. ISSN 2398-7308. PMID 23108786.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  29. ^ R.J. Roberge, A. Coca, W.J. Williams, J.B. Powell & A.J. Palmiero (2010). "Physiological Impact of the N95 Filtering Facepiece Respirator on Healthcare Workers". Respiratory Care. American Association for Respiratory Care (AARC). 55 (5): 569–577. ISSN 0020-1324. PMID 20420727.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  30. ^ Sinkule E., Turner N., Hota S. (2003). "Automated breathing and metabolic simulator (ABMS) CO2 test for powered and non-powered air-purifying respirators, airline respirators, and gas mask". American Industrial Hygiene Conference and Exposition, May 10-15, 2003. Dallas, Texas: American Industrial Hygiene Association. p. 54.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) copy
  31. ^ Gunner O. Dahlbäck, Lars-Goran Fallhagen (1987). "A Novel Method for Measuring Dead Space in Respiratory Protective Equipment". The Journal of the International Society for Respiratory Protection. The International Society for Respiratory Protection - The Edgewood Press, Inc. 5 (1): 12–17. ISSN 0892-6298.
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  33. ^ Carmen L. Smith, Jane L. Whitelaw & Brian Davies (2013). "Carbon dioxide rebreathing in respiratory protective devices: influence of speech and work rate in full-face masks". Ergonomics. Taylor & Francis. 56 (5): 781–790. doi:10.1080/00140139.2013.777128. ISSN 0014-0139. PMID 23514282. S2CID 40238982.
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Further reading edit

  • Savage, Robert C. Woosnam; Hall, Anthony (2002). Brassey's Book of Body Armor. Brassey's. ISBN 978-1-57488-465-4.
  • Palazzo, Albert (2000). Seeking Victory on the Western Front: The British Army and Chemical Warfare in World War I. University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 978-0-8032-8774-7.
  • Cheremisinoff, Nicholas (1999). Handbook of Industrial Toxicology and Hazardous Materials. Marcel Dekker. ISBN 978-0-8247-1935-7.
  • NIOSH respirators main page
  • NIOSH respirator fact sheet
  • What's Special about Chemical, Biological, Radiological, and Nuclear (CBRN) Air-Purifying Respirators (APR)? NIOSH Fact Sheet
  • NIOSH-Approved Disposable Particulate Respirators (Filtering Facepieces)
  • TSI Application note ITI-041: Mechanisms of Filtration for High Efficiency Fibrous Filters 29 August 2017 at the Wayback Machine
  • British Standard BS EN 143:2000: Respiratory protective devices – Particle filters – Requirements, testing, marking
  • British Standard BS EN 149:2001: Respiratory protective devices – Filtering half masks to protect against particles – Requirements, testing, marking

External links edit

  • 3M Safety Respirator Classification Guide 3M.com
  • Mine Safety Appliance Company (MSA) Respirator Classification Guide MSA.com
  • CDC Protective Masks Fact Sheet cdc.gov/niosh
  • Canadian Centre for Occupational Health and Safety (CCOHS) Respirator Selection ccohs.ca
  • The following links are respirator selection logic and competitive bid research information pages for Chemical, Biological, Radiological, and Nuclear (CBRN) defense responders:
  • Air-Purifying Respirators (APR): cdc.gov/niosh. Respirator manufacturer approvals for NIOSH-certified air-purifying respirator with CBRN Protections (CBRN APR). This link covers APR and Air-Purifying Escape Respirators (APER) certified by the NIOSH's National Personal Protective Technology Laboratory (NPPTL), Pittsburgh, PA, to CBRN protection NIOSH standards. CBRN APR are tight-fitting, full-face respirators with approved accessories and protect the user breathing zone by relying on user negative pressure, fit testing and user seal checks to filter less than Immediately Dangerous to Life and Health (IDLH) concentrations of hazardous respiratory compounds and particulates through NIOSH CBRN Cap 1, Cap 2 or Cap 3 canisters for CBRN APR- or CBRN 15- or CBRN 30-rated APER.
  • PAPR: cdc.gov/niosh. Respirator manufacturer approvals for NIOSH-certified powered air-purifying respirator with CBRN Protections (CBRN PAPR-loose fitting or tight fitting)
  • OSHA videos on respiratory protection 4 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine osha.gov
  • Occupational Safety & Health Administration, Respiratory Protection Training Video on respiratory protection
  • brinkster.com

respirator, mechanical, device, used, assist, breathing, ventilator, mask, worn, during, surgery, surgical, mask, respirator, device, designed, protect, wearer, from, inhaling, hazardous, atmospheres, including, fumes, vapours, gases, particulate, matter, such. For the mechanical device used to assist breathing see Ventilator For the mask worn during surgery see Surgical mask A respirator is a device designed to protect the wearer from inhaling hazardous atmospheres including fumes vapours gases and particulate matter such as dusts and airborne pathogens such as viruses There are two main categories of respirators the air purifying respirator in which respirable air is obtained by filtering a contaminated atmosphere and the air supplied respirator in which an alternate supply of breathable air is delivered Within each category different techniques are employed to reduce or eliminate noxious airborne contaminants White disposable Standard N95 filtering facepiece respiratorA half face elastomeric air purifying respirator This kind of respirator is reusable with the filters being replaced periodically Lab worker wearing a powered air purifying respiratorAir purifying respirators range from relatively inexpensive single use disposable face masks sometimes referred to as a filtering facepiece respirator to a more robust reusable model with replaceable cartridges called an elastomeric respirator Powered air purifying respirators PAPR use a pump or fan to constantly move air through a filter and supply purified air into a mask helmet or hood Contents 1 Physical form 2 Use 2 1 User seal check 2 2 Fit testing 2 3 Contrast with surgical mask 2 3 1 Surgical N95 2 4 Escape respirators 3 Air purifying respirators 3 1 Types of filtration 3 1 1 Mechanical filter 3 1 2 Chemical cartridge 3 2 Form factors 3 2 1 Filtering facepiece 3 2 2 Elastomeric 3 2 3 Powered air purifying respirators 4 Atmosphere supplying respirators 4 1 Self contained breathing apparatus 4 2 Supplied air respirator 5 Disadvantages 6 Regulation 7 History 7 1 Earliest records to 19th century 7 2 World War I 7 3 21st century 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksPhysical form edit nbsp Types of respirators by physical form Click to enlarge All respirators have some type of facepiece held to the wearer s head with straps a cloth harness or some other method Facepieces come in many different styles and sizes to accommodate all types of face shapes The differences in respirator designs impact the respirator assigned protection factors i e the resulting degree of protection from specific kinds of hazards citation needed Respirators can have half face forms that cover the bottom half of the face including the nose and mouth and full face forms that cover the entire face Half face respirators are only effective in environments where the contaminants are not toxic to the eyes or facial area For example someone who is spray painting could wear a half face respirator but someone who works with chlorine gas would have to wear a full face respirator citation needed An escape respirator may have no component that would normally be described as a mask and may use a bite grip mouthpiece and nose clip instead Use editA wide range of industries use respirators including healthcare amp pharmaceuticals defense amp public safety services defense firefighting amp law enforcement oil and gas industries manufacturing automotive chemical metal fabrication food and beverage wood working paper and pulp mining construction agriculture and forestry cement production power generation shipbuilding and the textile industry 1 Respirators require user training in order to provide proper protection User seal check edit Each time a wearer dons a respirator they must perform a seal check to be sure that they have an airtight seal to the face so that air does not leak around the edges of the respirator PAPR respirators may not require this because they don t necessarily seal to the face This check is different than the periodic fit test that is performed by specially trained personnel using testing equipment Filtering facepiece respirators are typically checked by cupping the hands over the facepiece while exhaling positive pressure check or inhaling negative pressure check and observing any air leakage around the facepiece Elastomeric respirators are checked in a similar manner except the wearer blocks the airways through the inlet valves negative pressure check or exhalation valves positive pressure check while observing the flexing of the respirator or air leakage Manufacturers have different methods for performing seal checks and wearers should consult the specific instructions for the model of respirator they are wearing Some models of respirators or filter cartridges have special buttons or other mechanisms built into them to facilitate seal checks 2 Fit testing edit Main article Respirator fit test Most types of respirators depend upon forming a good seal between the respirator body and the face of the wearer Fit testing procedures have been developed to ensure that the respirator is appropriate for the wearer and the wearer s donning technique is capable of creating an adequate seal 3 Poor fit can have a negative impact on the respirator s overall filtering effectiveness by as much as 65 4 A study on respirator effectiveness conducted in Beijing found that facial fit was the primary contributor to total inward leakage TIL based on a test of nine different models 5 Facial hair such as a beard can interfere with proper fit 6 Qualitative fit testing typically subjects the wearer to an atmosphere containing an aerosol that can be detected by the wearer such as saccharin or isoamyl acetate with the wearer reporting whether detectable levels of the aerosol has penetrated into the breathing area Quantitative fit testing typically uses a specially prepared respirator with an inserted probe The respirator is donned and aerosol concentrations inside and outside of the mask are compared and used to determine a numerical fit factor Typical room atmosphere contains sufficient particulates to perform the test but aerosol generators can be used to improve the test accuracy nbsp Workplace protection factor PF of filtering facepiece measured in real time with two optical dust meters In facepiece dust concentration is changed dozens of times in a matter of minutes due to changes of the size of the gaps between the mask and face 7 A U S Department of Labor study 8 showed that in almost 40 thousand American enterprises the requirements for the correct use of respirators are not always met Experts note that in practice it is difficult to achieve elimination of occupational morbidity with the help of respirators It is well known how ineffective trying to compensate the harmful workplace conditions with the use of respirators by employees 9 Unfortunately the only certain way of reducing the exceedance fraction to zero is to ensure that Co note Co concentration of pollutants in the breathing zone never exceeds the PEL value 10 The very limited field tests of air purifying respirator performance in the workplace show that respirators may perform far less well under actual use conditions than is indicated by laboratory fit factors We are not yet able to predict the level of protection accurately it will vary from person to person and it may also vary from one use to the next for the same individual In contrast we can predict the effectiveness of engineering controls and we can monitor their performance with commercially available state of the art devices 11 Contrast with surgical mask edit nbsp An infographic on the difference between surgical masks and N95 respiratorsA surgical mask is a loose fitting disposable device that creates a physical barrier between the mouth and nose of the wearer and potential contaminants in the immediate environment If worn properly a surgical mask is meant to help block large particle droplets splashes sprays or splatter that may contain viruses and bacteria Surgical masks may also help reduce exposure from the wearer s saliva and respiratory secretions to others especially during surgical procedures 12 A surgical mask by design does not filter or block very small particles from the outside air that may be transmitted by coughs sneezes or certain medical procedures to the wearer Surgical masks also do not provide complete protection from germs and other contaminants because of the loose fit between the surface of the face mask and the face 12 Collection efficiency of surgical mask filters can range from less than 10 to nearly 90 for different manufacturers masks when measured using the test parameters for NIOSH certification However a study found that even for surgical masks with good filters 80 100 of subjects failed an OSHA accepted qualitative fit test and a quantitative test showed 12 25 leakage 13 The U S Centers for Disease Control and Prevention CDC recommends surgical masks in procedures where there can be an aerosol generation from the wearer if small aerosols can produce a disease to the patient 14 Surgical N95 edit nbsp Astronaut Kate Rubins wearing a 3M 1860 surgical N95 respiratorSome N95 respirators have also been cleared by the U S National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health NIOSH and U S Food and Drug Administration as surgical and are labeled surgical N95 medical respirators or healthcare respirators These protect the patient and others from the wearer s respiratory emissions as a surgical mask would as well as protect the wearer from airborne particulates and aerosols as a standard N95 respirator Unlike a standard N95 respirator FDA cleared healthcare respirators also provide protection from high pressure streams or jets of bodily fluid such as blood 15 16 The CDC recommends the use of respirators with at least N95 certification to protect the wearer from inhalation of infectious particles including Mycobacterium tuberculosis avian influenza severe acute respiratory syndrome SARS pandemic influenza and Ebola 17 Escape respirators edit nbsp A simple Drager escape respirator This model has no hood and instead comes with noseclips to ensure the wearer breathes only through the filter See also Smoke hood Escape respirators or smoke hoods such as Air Purifying Escape Respirators are for use by the general public for chemical biological radiological and nuclear CBRN terrorism incidents citation needed The American National Standards Institute ANSI and the International Safety Equipment Association ISEA established the American National Standard for Air Purifying Respiratory Protective Smoke Escape Devices to define both test criteria and approval methods for fire smoke escape hoods ANSI ISEA Standard 110 provides design guidance to manufacturers of Respiratory Protective Smoke Escape Devices RPED in the form of performance requirements and testing procedures The standard covers certification ISO registration for the manufacturer associated test methods labeling conditioning requirements independent process and quality control audits and follow up inspection programs 18 ANSI ISEA 110 was prepared by members of the ISEA RPED group in consultation with testing laboratories and was reviewed by a consensus panel representing users health and safety professionals and government representatives citation needed The U S Consumer Product Safety Commission uses ANSI ISEA 110 as the benchmark in their testing of fire escape masks citation needed Air purifying respirators editAir purifying respirators are respirators that draw in the surrounding air and purify it before it is breathed unlike air supplying respirators which are sealed systems with no air intake like those used underwater Air purifying respirators are used against particulates gases and vapors that are at atmospheric concentrations less than immediately dangerous to life and health They may be negative pressure respirators driven by the wearer s inhalation and exhalation or positive pressure units such as powered air purifying respirators PAPRs Air purifying respirators may use one or both of two kinds of filtration mechanical filters retain particulate matter while chemical cartridges remove gases volatile organic compounds VOCs and other vapors Additionally air purifying respirators may come in many forms filtering facepiece respirators consist solely of a disposable mechanical filter elastomeric respirators are reusable but have replaceable filters attached to the mask and powered air purifying respirators have a battery powered blower that moves the airflow through the filters According to the NIOSH Respirator Selection Logic air purifying respirators are recommended for concentrations of hazardous particulates or gases that are greater than the relevant occupational exposure limit but less than the immediately dangerous to life or health level and the manufacturer s maximum use concentration subject to the respirator having a sufficient assigned protection factor For substances hazardous to the eyes a respirator equipped with a full facepiece helmet or hood is recommended Air purifying respirators are not effective during firefighting in oxygen deficient atmosphere or in an unknown atmosphere in these situations a self contained breathing apparatus is recommended instead 19 Types of filtration edit Mechanical filter edit Main article Mechanical filter respirator source source source source source source source source track A video describing N95 certification testingMechanical filter respirators retain particulate matter such as dust created during woodworking or metal processing when contaminated air is passed through the filter material Since the filters cannot be cleaned and reused and have a limited lifespan cost and disposability are key factors Single use disposable and replaceable cartridge models exist citation needed Mechanical filters remove contaminants from air in several ways interception when particles following a line of flow in the airstream come within one radius of a fiber and adhere to it impaction when larger particles unable to follow the curving contours of the airstream are forced to embed in one of the fibers directly this increases with diminishing fiber separation and higher air flow velocity by diffusion where gas molecules collide with the smallest particles especially those below 100 nm in diameter which are thereby impeded and delayed in their path through the filter increasing the probability that particles will be stopped by either of the previous two mechanisms and by using an electrostatic charge that attracts and holds particles on the filter surface There are many different filtration standards that vary by jurisdiction In the United States the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health defines the categories of particulate filters according to their NIOSH air filtration rating The most common of these are the N95 respirator which filters at least 95 of airborne particles but is not resistant to oil Other categories filter 99 or 99 97 of particles or have varying degrees of resistance to oil 20 In the European Union European standard EN 143 defines the P classes of particle filters that can be attached to a face mask while European standard EN 149 defines classes of filtering half masks or filtering facepieces usually called FFP masks 21 According to 3M the filtering media in respirators made according to the following standards are similar to U S N95 or European FFP2 respirators however the construction of the respirators themselves such as providing a proper seal to the face varies considerably For example US NIOSH approved respirators never include earloops because they don t provide enough support to establish a reliable airtight seal Those standards include the Chinese KN95 Australian New Zealand P2 Korean 1st Class also referred to as KF94 and Japanese DS 22 Chemical cartridge edit nbsp Combined gas and particulate respirator filter type BKF BKF for protection against acid gases It has a transparent body and a special sorbent that changes color upon saturation This color change may be used for timely replacement of respirators filters like an end of service life indicator ESLI Main article Respirator cartridge Chemical cartridge respirators use a cartridge to remove gases volatile organic compounds VOCs and other vapors from breathing air by adsorption absorption or chemisorption A typical organic vapor respirator cartridge is a metal or plastic case containing from 25 to 40 grams of sorption media such as activated charcoal or certain resins The service life of the cartridge varies based among other variables on the carbon weight and molecular weight of the vapor and the cartridge media the concentration of vapor in the atmosphere the relative humidity of the atmosphere and the breathing rate of the respirator wearer When filter cartridges become saturated or particulate accumulation within them begins to restrict air flow they must be changed 23 If the concentration of harmful gases is immediately dangerous to life or health in workplaces covered by the Occupational Safety and Health Act the US Occupational Safety and Health Administration specifies the use of air supplied respirators except when intended solely for escape during emergencies 24 NIOSH also discourages their use under such conditions 25 Form factors edit Filtering facepiece edit nbsp Filtering facepiece half mask with exhalation valve class FFP3 Filtering facepiece respirators are discarded when they become unsuitable for further use due to considerations of hygiene excessive resistance or physical damage 26 These are typically simple light single piece half face masks and employ the first three mechanical filter mechanisms in the list above to remove particulates from the air stream The most common of these is the white disposable Standard N95 variety another type is the blue Surgical N95 mask It is discarded after single use or some extended period depending on the contaminant Elastomeric edit nbsp New York Police Department officer wearing a 3M elastomeric respirator with P100 standard particulate filters in the aftermath of the 2007 New York City steam explosionMain article Elastomeric respirator Elastomeric respirators are reusable because the facepiece is cleaned and reused but the filter cartridges are discarded and replaced when they become unsuitable for further use 26 These are replaceable cartridge multiple use models Typically one or two cartridges attach securely to a mask which has built into it a corresponding number of valves for inhalation and one for exhalation Powered air purifying respirators edit Main article Powered air purifying respirator Powered air purifying respirators PAPRs have a battery powered blower that moves the airflow through the filters 26 They take contaminated air remove a certain quantity of pollutants and return the air to the user There are different units for different environments The units consist of a powered fan which forces incoming air through one or more filters to the user for breathing The fan and filters may be carried by the user or they may be remotely mounted and the user breathes the air through tubing citation needed The filter type must be matched to the contaminants that need to be removed Some PAPR s are designed to remove fine particulate matter while others are suitable for working with volatile organic compounds as those in spray paints These must have their filter elements replaced more often than a particulate filter citation needed Atmosphere supplying respirators editThese respirators do not purify the ambient air but supply breathing gas from another source The three types are the self contained breathing apparatus in which a compressed air cylinder is worn by the wearer the supplied air respirators where a hose supplies air from a stationary source and combination respirators that integrate both types 27 According to the NIOSH Respirator Selection Logic atmosphere supplying are recommended for concentrations of hazardous particulates or gases that are greater than the immediately dangerous to life or health level where the required assigned protection factor exceeds those of air purifying respirators during firefighting self contained breathing apparatuses only in oxygen deficient atmosphere and in an unknown atmosphere 19 Self contained breathing apparatus edit Main article Self contained breathing apparatus A self contained breathing apparatus SCBA typically has three main components a high pressure air cylinder e g 2200 psi to 4500 psi a pressure gauge and regulator and an inhalation connection mouthpiece mouth mask or full face mask connected together and mounted to a carrying frame or a harness with adjustable shoulder straps and belt so it can be worn on the back There are two kinds of SCBA open circuit and closed circuit Most modern SCBAs are open circuit citation needed Open circuit industrial breathing sets are filled with filtered compressed air The compressed air passes through a regulator is inhaled and exhaled out of the circuit quickly depleting the supply of air Air cylinders are made of aluminum steel or of a composite construction like fiberglass wrapped aluminum The positive pressure type is common which supplies a steady stream of air to stop fumes or smoke from leaking into the mask Other SCBA s are of the demand type which only supply air when the regulator senses the user inhaling All fire departments and those working in toxic environments use the positive pressure SCBA for safety reasons citation needed The closed circuit type SCBA filters supplements and recirculates exhaled gas like a rebreather It is used when a longer duration supply of breathing gas is needed such as in mine rescue and in long tunnels and going through passages too narrow for a large open circuit air cylinder citation needed Supplied air respirator edit Main article Supplied air respirator Supplied air respirators make use of a hose to deliver air from a stationary source It provides clean air for long periods of time and are light weight for the user although it limits user mobility They are normally used when there are extended work periods required in atmospheres that are not immediately dangerous to life and health IDLH 27 Disadvantages editExtended use of respirators can result in higher levels of carbon dioxide than recommended in a work environment 28 29 30 31 32 33 and can lead to headaches 34 dermatitis and acne 35 Regulation editThe choice and use of respirators in developed countries is regulated by national legislation To ensure that employers choose respirators correctly and perform high quality respiratory protection programs various guides and textbooks have been developed Textbooks and guidelines for the selection and use of respiratorsCountry Language Year of publication Pages Institution hyperlink to document US English 1987 305 NIOSH 36 US English 2005 32 NIOSH 37 US English 1999 120 NIOSH 38 US English 2017 48 Pesticide Educational Resources Collaborative PERC 39 US English amp Spanish OSHA 40 US English 2011 124 OSHA 41 US English 2015 96 OSHA 42 US English 2012 44 OSHA 43 US English 2014 44 OSHA 44 US English 2016 32 OSHA 45 US English 2014 38 OSHA 46 US English 2017 51 OSHA 47 US English 2001 166 NRC 48 US English 1986 173 NIOSH amp EPA 49 Canada French 2013 2002 60 Institut de recherche Robert Sauve en sante et en securite du travail IRSST 50 Canada English 2015 Institut de recherche Robert Sauve en sante et en securite du travai IRSST 51 Canada French 2015 Institut de recherche Robert Sauve en sante et en securite du travai IRSST 52 France French 2017 68 Institut National de Recherche et de Securite INRS 53 Germany German 2011 174 Spitzenverband der gewerblichen Berufsgenossenschaften und der Unfallversicherungstrager der offentlichen Hand DGUV 54 UK English 2013 59 The Health and Safety Executive HSE 55 UK English 2016 29 The UK Nuclear Industry Good PracIndustry Radiological Protection Coordination Group IRPCG 56 Ireland English 2010 19 The Health and Safety Authority HSA 57 New Zealand English 1999 51 Occupational Safety and Health Service OSHS 58 Chile Spanish 2009 40 Instituto de Salud Publica de Chile ISPCH 59 Spain Spanish 16 Instituto Nacional de Seguridad Salud y Bienestar en el Trabajo INSHT 60 For standard filter classes used in respirators see Mechanical filter respirator Filtration standards History editEarliest records to 19th century edit nbsp Plague doctorThe history of protective respiratory equipment can be traced back as far as the first century when Pliny the Elder c 23 AD 79 described using animal bladder skins to protect workers in Roman mines from red lead oxide dust 61 In the 16th century Leonardo da Vinci suggested that a finely woven cloth dipped in water could protect sailors from a toxic weapon made of powder that he had designed 62 In 1785 Jean Francois Pilatre de Rozier invented a respirator Alexander von Humboldt introduced a primitive respirator in 1799 when he worked as a mining engineer in Prussia 63 Practically all respirators in the early 18th century consisted of a bag placed completely over the head fastened around the throat with windows through which the wearer could see Some were rubber some were made of rubberized fabric and still others of impregnated fabric but in most cases a tank of compressed air or a reservoir of air under slight pressure was carried by the wearer to supply the necessary breathing air In some devices certain means were provided for the adsorption of carbon dioxide in exhaled air and the rebreathing of the same air many times in other cases valves allowed exhalation of used air citation needed Julius Jeffreys first used the word respirator as a mask in 1836 64 The mask worked by capturing moisture and warmth in exhaled air in a grid of fine metal wires Inhaled air then was warmed and moistened as it passed through the same metal grid providing relief to people with lung diseases The Respirator became popular and was mentioned in the literature of the day including in the writings of Elizabeth Gaskell William Makepeace Thackeray and Charles Dickens nbsp Woodcut of Stenhouse s mask nbsp How a Man may Breathe Safely in a Poisonous Atmosphere an apparatus providing oxygen while using caustic soda to absorb carbon dioxide 1909In 1848 the first US patent for an air purifying respirator was granted to Lewis P Haslett 65 for his Haslett s Lung Protector which filtered dust from the air using one way clapper valves and a filter made of moistened wool or a similar porous substance 66 Following Haslett a long string of patents were issued for air purifying devices including patents for the use of cotton fibers as a filtering medium for charcoal and lime absorption of poisonous vapors and for improvements on the eyepiece and eyepiece assembly citation needed Hutson Hurd patented a cup shaped mask in 1879 which became widespread in industrial use and Hurd s H S Cover Company was still in business in the 1970s 67 Inventors in Europe included John Stenhouse a Scottish chemist who investigated the power of charcoal in its various forms to capture and hold large volumes of gas He built one of the first respirators able to remove toxic gases from the air paving the way for activated charcoal to become the most widely used filter for respirators 68 Irish physicist John Tyndall took Stenhouse s mask added a filter of cotton wool saturated with lime glycerin and charcoal and in 1871 invented a fireman s respirator a hood that filtered smoke and gas from air which he exhibited at a meeting of the Royal Society in London in 1874 69 Also in 1874 Samuel Barton patented a device that permitted respiration in places where the atmosphere is charged with noxious gases or vapors smoke or other impurities 70 71 German Bernhard Loeb patented several inventions to purify foul or vitiated air and counted the Brooklyn Fire Department among his customers citation needed A predecessor of the N95 was a design by Doctor Lien teh Wu who was working for the Chinese Imperial Court in the fall of 1910 which was the first that protected users from bacteria in empirical testing Subsequent respirators were reusable but bulky and uncomfortable In the 1970s the Bureau of Mines and NIOSH developed standards for single use respirators and the first N95 respirator was developed by 3M and approved in 1972 72 World War I edit The first recorded response and defense against chemical attacks using respirators occurred during the Second Battle of Ypres on the Western Front in World War I It was the first time Germany used chemical weapons on a large scale releasing 168 tons of chlorine gas over a four mile 6 km front killing around 6 000 troops within ten minutes through asphyxiation The gas being denser than air flowed downwards forcing troops to climb out of their trenches Reserve Canadian troops who were away from the attack used urine soaked cloths as primitive respirators A Canadian soldier realized that the ammonia in urine would react with the chlorine neutralizing it and that the water would dissolve the chlorine allowing soldiers to breathe through the gas citation needed 21st century edit China normally makes 10 million masks per day about half of the world production During the COVID 19 pandemic 2 500 factories were converted to produce 116 million daily 73 During the COVID 19 pandemic people in the United States and in a lot of countries in the world were urged to make their own cloth masks due to the widespread shortage of commercial masks 74 See also editCartridge respirator Container that cleans pollution from air inhaled through itPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Dust mask Pad held over the nose and mouth to protect against dust Face shield Device used to protect the wearer s face from hazards Gas mask Protection from inhaling airborne pollutants and toxic gases Open source hardware Hardware from the open design movement Microparticle performance rating used to measure an air filter s ability to capture small particlesPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Minimum efficiency reporting value Measurement scale for the effectiveness of air filters Personal protective equipment Equipment designed to help protect an individual from hazards PPE Pocket mask Device used to safely deliver first aid rescue breaths Self contained breathing apparatus Breathing gas supply system carried by the user Smoke hood Device to protect the user from smoke inhalation in an emergency Surgical mask Mouth and nose cover against bacterial aerosols Ventilator Device that provides mechanical ventilation to the lungs Workplace respirator testing Testing of respirators in real life conditionsReferences edit Respirator use and practices U S Bureau of Labour Statistics Filtering out Confusion Frequently Asked Questions about Respiratory Protection User Seal Check 2018 PDF NIOSH Retrieved 8 December 2021 29 CFR 1910 134 Appendix A Fit Testing Procedures Mandatory United States Occupational Safety and Health Administration OSHA Puraka Clean Air Resources for Particulate Pollution amp Smoke www cleanairresources com Retrieved 26 February 2019 Cherrie John W Apsley Andrew Cowie Hilary Steinle Susanne Mueller William Lin Chun Horwell Claire J Sleeuwenhoek Anne Loh Miranda June 2018 Effectiveness of face masks used to protect Beijing residents against particulate air pollution Occupational and Environmental Medicine 75 6 446 452 doi 10 1136 oemed 2017 104765 ISSN 1351 0711 PMC 5969371 PMID 29632130 To Beard or not to Beard That s a good Question Blogs CDC 2 November 2017 Retrieved 27 February 2020 Lee Shu An Sergey Grinshpun 2005 Laboratory and Field Evaluation of a New Personal Sampling System for Assessing the Protection Provided by the N95 Filtering Facepiece Respirators against Particles The Annals of Occupational Hygiene 49 3 245 257 doi 10 1093 annhyg meh097 ISSN 0003 4878 PMID 15668259 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link U S Department of Labor Bureau of Labor Statistics Respirator Usage in Private Sector Firms 2001 PDF Morgantown WV U S Department of Health and Human Services Centers for Disease Control and Prevention National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health p 273 Retrieved 22 January 2019 Letavet A A in Russian 1973 Institut gigieny truda i professionalnyh zabolevanij v sostave AMN SSSR Research Institute of industrial hygiene and occupational diseases of AMS USSR Occupational medicine and industrial ecology Gigiena truda i professionalnye zabolevaniya in Russian 9 1 7 ISSN 1026 9428 M Nicas amp R Spear 1992 A Probability Model for Assessing Exposure among Respirator Wearers Part II Overexposure to Chronic versus Acute Toxicants American Industrial Hygiene Association Journal 53 7 419 426 doi 10 1080 15298669291359889 PMID 1496932 Retrieved 22 January 2018 Edwin C Hyatt 1984 Respirators How well do they really protect Journal of the International Society for Respiratory Protection 2 1 6 19 ISSN 0892 6298 Retrieved 22 January 2018 a b N95 Respirators and Surgical Masks Face Masks U S Food and Drug Administration 11 March 2020 Retrieved 28 March 2020 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Brosseau Lisa Ann Roland Berry 14 October 2009 N95 Respirators and Surgical Masks NIOSH Science Blog Retrieved 28 March 2020 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Isolation Precautions U S Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 22 July 2019 Retrieved 9 February 2020 Respirator Trusted Source Information Ancillary Respirator Information U S National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health 26 January 2018 Retrieved 12 February 2020 Surgical N95 vs Standard N95 Which to Consider Technical Bulletin Revision 3 PDF June 2020 Archived from the original PDF on 6 July 2020 Retrieved 6 July 2020 2007 Guideline for Isolation Precautions Preventing Transmission of Infectious Agents in Healthcare Settings PDF U S Centers for Disease Control and Prevention July 2019 pp 55 56 Retrieved 9 February 2020 International Safety Equipment Association Safetyequipment org Retrieved 18 April 2010 a b Bollinger Nancy 1 October 2004 NIOSH respirator selection logic U S National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health 5 16 doi 10 26616 NIOSHPUB2005100 Retrieved 20 April 2020 Metzler R Szalajda J 2011 NIOSH Fact Sheet NIOSH Approval Labels Key Information to Protect Yourself PDF DHHS NIOSH Publication No 2011 179 ISSN 0343 6993 https www hsa ie eng Publications and Forms Publications Chemical and Hazardous Substances Respiratory 20Protective 20Equipment pdf bare URL PDF Technical Bulletin Comparison of FFP2 KN95 and N95 and Other Filtering Facepiece Respirator Classes PDF 3M Personal Safety Division January 2020 The document describes the methods used previously and currently used to perform the timely replacement of cartridges in air purifying respirators OSHA standard 29 CFR 1910 134 Respiratory Protection Bollinger Nancy et al 2004 NIOSH Respirator Selection Logic DHHS NIOSH Publication No 2005 100 Cincinnati Ohio National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health p 32 doi 10 26616 NIOSHPUB2005100 a b c Respirator Trusted Source Information What are they U S National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health 29 January 2018 Retrieved 27 March 2020 a b Respirator Selection Air purifying vs Atmosphere supplying Respirators U S Occupational Safety and Health Administration Retrieved 9 April 2020 Mean values for several models some models may provide a stronger exposure to carbon dioxide For example IDLH for CO2 4 but filtering facepiese AOSafety Pleats Plus provided concentration up to 5 8 source E J Sinkule J B Powell F L Goss 2013 Evaluation of N95 respirator use with a surgical mask cover effects on breathing resistance and inhaled carbon dioxide Annals of Occupational Hygiene Oxford University Press 57 3 384 398 doi 10 1093 annhyg mes068 ISSN 2398 7308 PMID 23108786 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link R J Roberge A Coca W J Williams J B Powell amp A J Palmiero 2010 Physiological Impact of the N95 Filtering Facepiece Respirator on Healthcare Workers Respiratory Care American Association for Respiratory Care AARC 55 5 569 577 ISSN 0020 1324 PMID 20420727 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Sinkule E Turner N Hota S 2003 Automated breathing and metabolic simulator ABMS CO2 test for powered and non powered air purifying respirators airline respirators and gas mask American Industrial Hygiene Conference and Exposition May 10 15 2003 Dallas Texas American Industrial Hygiene Association p 54 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link copy Gunner O Dahlback Lars Goran Fallhagen 1987 A Novel Method for Measuring Dead Space in Respiratory Protective Equipment The Journal of the International Society for Respiratory Protection The International Society for Respiratory Protection The Edgewood Press Inc 5 1 12 17 ISSN 0892 6298 Shai Luria Shlomo Givoni Yuval Heled Boaz Tadmor Alexandra Khanin Yoram Epstein 2004 Evaluation of CO2 Accumulation in Respiratory Protective Devices Military Medicine Oxford University Press 169 2 121 124 doi 10 7205 MILMED 169 2 121 ISSN 0026 4075 PMID 15040632 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Carmen L Smith Jane L Whitelaw amp Brian Davies 2013 Carbon dioxide rebreathing in respiratory protective devices influence of speech and work rate in full face masks Ergonomics Taylor amp Francis 56 5 781 790 doi 10 1080 00140139 2013 777128 ISSN 0014 0139 PMID 23514282 S2CID 40238982 E C H Lim R C S Seet K H Lee E P V Wilder Smith B Y S Chuah B K C Ong 2006 Headaches and the N95 face mask amongst healthcare providers Acta Neurologica Scandinavica John Wiley amp Sons 113 3 199 202 doi 10 1111 j 1600 0404 2005 00560 x ISSN 0001 6314 PMC 7159726 PMID 16441251 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Chris C I Foo Anthony T J Goon Yung Hian Leow Chee Leok Goh 2006 Adverse skin reactions to personal protective equipment against severe acute respiratory syndrome a descriptive study in Singapore Contact Dermatitis John Wiley amp Sons 55 5 291 294 doi 10 1111 j 1600 0536 2006 00953 x ISSN 0105 1873 PMC 7162267 PMID 17026695 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Nancy J Bollinger Robert H Schutz et al 1987 NIOSH Guide to Industrial Respiratory Protection DHHS NIOSH Publication No 87 116 Cincinnati Ohio National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health p 305 doi 10 26616 NIOSHPUB87116 Retrieved 10 June 2018 Nancy Bollinger et al 2004 NIOSH Respirator Selection Logic DHHS NIOSH Publication No 2005 100 Cincinnati Ohio National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health p 32 doi 10 26616 NIOSHPUB2005100 Retrieved 10 June 2018 Linda Rosenstock et al 1999 TB Respiratory Protection Program In Health Care Facilities Administrator s Guide DHHS NIOSH Publication No 99 143 Cincinnati Ohio National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health p 120 doi 10 26616 NIOSHPUB99143 Retrieved 10 June 2018 Kathleen Kincade Garnet Cooke Kaci Buhl et al 2017 Janet Fults ed Respiratory Protection Guide Requirements for Employers of Pesticide Handlers Worker Protection Standard WPS California Pesticide Educational Resources Collaborative PERC p 48 Retrieved 10 June 2018 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link PDF Wiki Occupational Safety and Health Administration 1998 Respiratory Protection eTool OSHA in English and Spanish Washington DC Retrieved 10 June 2018 Hilda L Solis et al 2011 Small Entity Compliance Guide for the Respiratory Protection Standard OSHA 3384 09 Washington DC Occupational Safety and Health Administration U S Department of Labor p 124 Retrieved 10 June 2018 PDF Wiki OSHA et al 2015 Hospital Respiratory Protection Program Toolkit OSHA 3767 Resources for Respirator Program Administrators Washington DC Occupational Safety and Health Administration U S Department of Labor p 96 Retrieved 10 June 2018 PDF Wiki J Edgar Geddie 2012 A Guide to Respiratory Protection Industry Guide 44 2 ed Raleigh North Carolina Occupational Safety and Health Division N C Department of Labor p 54 Retrieved 10 June 2018 Patricia Young Phillip Fehrenbacher amp Mark Peterson 2014 Breathe Right Oregon OSHA s guide to developing a respiratory protection program for small business owners and managers Publications Guides 440 3330 Salem Oregon Oregon OSHA Standards and Technical Resources Section Oregon Occupational Safety and Health p 44 Retrieved 10 June 2018 PDF Wiki Patricia Young amp Mark Peterson 2016 Air you breathe Oregon OSHA s respiratory protection guide for agricultural employers Publications Guides 440 3654 Salem Oregon Oregon OSHA Standards and Technical Resources Section Oregon Occupational Safety and Health p 32 Retrieved 10 June 2018 Oregon OSHA 2014 Section VIII Chapter 2 Respiratory Protection Oregon OSHA Technical Manual Rules Salem Oregon Oregon OSHA p 38 Retrieved 10 June 2018 PDF Wiki Cal OSHA Consultation Service Research and Education Unit Division of Occupational Safety and Health California Department of Industrial Relations 2017 Respiratory Protection in the Workplace A Practical Guide for Small Business Employers 3 ed Santa Ana California California Department of Industrial Relations p 51 Retrieved 10 June 2018 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link PDF K Paul Steinmeyer et al 2001 Manual of Respiratory Protection Against Airborne Radioactive Material NUREG CR 0041 Revision 1 Washington DC Office of Nuclear Reactor Regulation U S Nuclear Regulatory Commission p 166 Retrieved 10 June 2018 PDF Wiki Gary P Noonan Herbert L Linn Laurence D Reed et al 1986 Susan V Vogt ed A guide to respiratory protection for the asbestos abatement industry NIOSH IA 85 06 EPA DW 75932235 01 1 Washington DC Environmental Protection Agency EPA amp National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health NIOSH p 173 Retrieved 10 June 2018 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Jaime Lara Mireille Vennes 2002 Guide pratique de protection respiratoire Projet de recherche 0098 0660 in French 1 ed Montreal Quebec Canada Institut de recherche Robert Sauve en sante et en securite du travail IRSST Commission de la sante et de la securite du travail du Quebec p 56 ISBN 978 2 550 37465 7 Retrieved 10 June 2018 2 edition Jaime Lara Mireille Vennes 26 August 2013 Guide pratique de protection respiratoire DC 200 1635 2CORR in French 2 ed Montreal Quebec Canada Institut de recherche Robert Sauve en sante et en securite du travail IRSST Commission de la sante et de la securite du travail du Quebec p 60 ISBN 978 2 550 40403 3 Archived from the original on 22 August 2019 Retrieved 10 June 2018 online version Jaime Lara Mireille Vennes 2016 Appareils de protection respiratoire www cnesst gouv qc ca in French Quebec Quebec Canada Commission des normes de l equite de la sante et de la securite du travail Archived from the original on 22 March 2021 Retrieved 10 June 2018 Jacques Lavoie Maximilien Debia Eve Neesham Grenon Genevieve Marchand Yves Cloutier 22 May 2015 A support tool for choosing respiratory protection against bioaerosols www irsst qc ca Montreal Quebec Canada Institut de recherche Robert Sauve en sante et en securite du travail IRSST Retrieved 10 June 2018 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Publication no UT 024 Research Project 0099 9230 Jacques Lavoie Maximilien Debia Eve Neesham Grenon Genevieve Marchand Yves Cloutier 22 May 2015 Un outil d aide a la prise de decision pour choisir une protection respiratoire contre les bioaerosols www irsst qc ca in French Montreal Quebec Canada Institut de recherche Robert Sauve en sante et en securite du travail IRSST Retrieved 10 June 2018 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link N de publication UT 024 Projet de recherche 0099 9230 M Gumon 2017 Les appareils de protection respiratoire Choix et utilisation ED 6106 in French 2 ed Paris Institut National de Recherche et de Securite INRS p 68 ISBN 978 2 7389 2303 5 Retrieved 10 June 2018 Spitzenverband der gewerblichen Berufsgenossenschaften und der Unfallversicherungstrager der offentlichen Hand DGUV 2011 BGR GUV R 190 Benutzung von Atemschutzgeraten in German Berlin Deutsche Gesetzliche Unfallversicherung e V DGUV Medienproduktion p 174 Retrieved 10 June 2018 PDF The Health and Safety Executive 2013 Respiratory protective equipment at work A practical guide HSG53 4 ed Crown p 59 ISBN 978 0 71766 454 2 Retrieved 10 June 2018 The UK Nuclear Industry Radiological Protection Coordination Group 2016 Respiratory Protective Equipment PDF Good Practice Guide London UK IRPCG p 29 Retrieved 10 June 2018 The Health and Safety Authority 2010 A Guide to Respiratory Protective Equipment HSA0362 Dublin Ireland HSA p 19 ISBN 978 1 84496 144 3 Retrieved 10 June 2018 PDF Occupational Safety and Health Service 1999 A guide to respiratory protection 8 ed Wellington New Zealand NZ Department of Labour p 51 ISBN 978 0 477 03625 2 Archived from the original on 12 June 2018 Retrieved 10 June 2018 PDF Archived 29 January 2018 at the Wayback Machine Christian Albornoz Hugo Cataldo 2009 Guia para la seleccion y control de proteccion respiratoria Guia tecnica in Spanish Santiago Chile Departamento de salud occupational Instituto de Salud Publica de Chile p 40 Archived from the original on 22 August 2019 Retrieved 10 June 2018 PDF Instituto Nacional de Seguridad Salud y Bienestar en el Trabajo INSSBT Guia orientativa para la seleccion y utilizacion de protectores respiratorios Documentos tecnicos INSHT in Spanish Madrid Instituto Nacional de Seguridad Salud y Bienestar en el Trabajo INSHT p 16 Retrieved 10 June 2018 PDF Naturalis Historia Liber XXXIII XL in Latin via Wikisource Women in the US Military History of Gas Masks Chnm gmu edu 11 September 2001 Retrieved 18 April 2010 Humboldt Alexander von 1799 Ueber die unterirdischen Gasarten und die Mittel ihren Nachtheil zu vermindern WorldAtlas Retrieved 27 March 2020 David Zuck 1990 Julius Jeffreys Pioneer of humidification PDF Proceedings of the History of Anaesthesia Society 8b 70 80 Retrieved 16 August 2020 Christianson Scott 2010 Fatal Airs The Deadly History and Apocalyptic Future of Lethal Gases that Threaten Our World ABC CLIO ISBN 9780313385520 US patent 6529A Lewis P Haslett Lung Protector published 1849 06 12 issued 1849 06 12 1 Improvement in inhaler and respirator issued 1879 08 26 Britain Royal Institution of Great 1858 Notices of the Proceedings at the Meetings of the Members of the Royal Institution with Abstracts of the Discourses W Nicol Printer to the Royal Institution p 53 Tyndall John 1873 On Some Recent Experiments with a Fireman s Respirator Proceedings of the Royal Society of London 22 359 361 Bibcode 1873RSPS 22R 359T ISSN 0370 1662 JSTOR 112853 Gas Mask Development 1926 67 225 133 110 Retrieved 27 March 2020 US patent 148868A Samuel Barton Respirator published 1874 03 24 issued 1874 03 24 Wilson Mark 24 March 2020 The untold origin story of the N95 mask Fast Company Retrieved 27 March 2020 Xie John 19 March 2020 World Depends on China for Face Masks But Can Country Deliver www voanews com Voice of America Archived from the original on 21 March 2020 Hatmaker Taylor 2 April 2020 CDC recommends Americans wear cloth masks to limit spread of COVID 19 TechCrunch Retrieved 23 April 2020 Further reading editSavage Robert C Woosnam Hall Anthony 2002 Brassey s Book of Body Armor Brassey s ISBN 978 1 57488 465 4 Palazzo Albert 2000 Seeking Victory on the Western Front The British Army and Chemical Warfare in World War I University of Nebraska Press ISBN 978 0 8032 8774 7 Cheremisinoff Nicholas 1999 Handbook of Industrial Toxicology and Hazardous Materials Marcel Dekker ISBN 978 0 8247 1935 7 NIOSH respirators main page NIOSH respirator fact sheet What s Special about Chemical Biological Radiological and Nuclear CBRN Air Purifying Respirators APR NIOSH Fact Sheet NIOSH Approved Disposable Particulate Respirators Filtering Facepieces TSI Application note ITI 041 Mechanisms of Filtration for High Efficiency Fibrous Filters Archived 29 August 2017 at the Wayback Machine British Standard BS EN 143 2000 Respiratory protective devices Particle filters Requirements testing marking British Standard BS EN 149 2001 Respiratory protective devices Filtering half masks to protect against particles Requirements testing markingExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Respirators 3M Safety Respirator Classification Guide 3M com Mine Safety Appliance Company MSA Respirator Classification Guide MSA com CDC Protective Masks Fact Sheet cdc gov niosh Canadian Centre for Occupational Health and Safety CCOHS Respirator Selection ccohs ca The following links are respirator selection logic and competitive bid research information pages for Chemical Biological Radiological and Nuclear CBRN defense responders Air Purifying Respirators APR cdc gov niosh Respirator manufacturer approvals for NIOSH certified air purifying respirator with CBRN Protections CBRN APR This link covers APR and Air Purifying Escape Respirators APER certified by the NIOSH s National Personal Protective Technology Laboratory NPPTL Pittsburgh PA to CBRN protection NIOSH standards CBRN APR are tight fitting full face respirators with approved accessories and protect the user breathing zone by relying on user negative pressure fit testing and user seal checks to filter less than Immediately Dangerous to Life and Health IDLH concentrations of hazardous respiratory compounds and particulates through NIOSH CBRN Cap 1 Cap 2 or Cap 3 canisters for CBRN APR or CBRN 15 or CBRN 30 rated APER PAPR cdc gov niosh Respirator manufacturer approvals for NIOSH certified powered air purifying respirator with CBRN Protections CBRN PAPR loose fitting or tight fitting OSHA videos on respiratory protection Archived 4 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine osha gov Occupational Safety amp Health Administration Respiratory Protection Training Video on respiratory protection The Invention of the Gas Mask brinkster com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Respirator amp oldid 1175760005, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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