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NIOSH Publication No. 2005-100:

NIOSH Respirator Selection Logic 2004

October 2004

 

Chapter VI. Glossary of Respiratory Protection Terms


The following definitions are important terms used in the respiratory protection standard and terms that will assist in the understanding and the application of the NIOSH decision logic.

Air-Purifying Respirator: A respirator with an air-purifying filter, cartridge, or canister that removes specific air contaminants by passing ambient air through the air-purifying element.

Assigned Protection Factor (APF): The minimum anticipated protection provided by a properly functioning respirator or class of respirators to a given percentage of properly fitted and trained users.

Atmosphere-Supplying Respirator: A respirator that supplies the respirator user with breathing air from a source independent of the ambient atmosphere, and includes supplied-air respirators (SARs) and self-contained breathing apparatus (SCBA) units.

Auxiliary SCBA: An auxiliary unit means that the SAR unit includes a separate air bottle to provide a reserve source of air should the airline become damaged. The auxiliary unit shares the same mask and regulator, and enables the SAR to function as an SCBA if needed.

Breakthrough: The penetration of challenge material(s) through a gas or a vapor air-purifying element. The quantity or extent of breakthrough during service life testing is often referred to as the percentage of the input concentration.

Canister or Cartridge: A container with a filter, sorbent, or catalyst, or combination of these items, which removes specific contaminants from the air passed through the container.

Continuous Flow: A respirator that maintains air flow at all times, rather than only on demand. However, it may not maintain positive pressure within the mask at all times. Negative pressure conditions may occur during inhalation involving strenuous activity.

Demand Respirator: A respirator in which the pressure inside the facepiece in relation to the immediate environment is positive during exhalation and negative during inhalation.

Disposable Respirators: A respirator that is discarded after the end of its recommended period of use, after excessive resistance or physical damage, or when odor breakthrough or other warning indicators render the respirator unsuitable for further use.

Emergency Respirator Use Situation: A situation that requires the use of respirators due to the unplanned generation of a hazardous atmosphere (often of unknown composition) caused by an accident, mechanical failure, or other means and that requires evacuation of personnel or immediate entry for rescue or corrective action.

Employee Exposure: Exposure to a concentration of an airborne contaminant that would occur if the employee were not using respiratory protection.

End-Of-Service-Life Indicator (ESLI): A system that warns the respirator user of the approach of the end of adequate respiratory protection; for example, that the sorbent is approaching saturation or is no longer effective.

Escape Gas Mask: A gas mask that consists of a half-mask facepiece or mouthpiece, a canister, and associated connections, and that is designed for use during escape-only from hazardous atmospheres.

Escape Only Respirator: Respiratory devices that are designed for use only during escape from hazardous atmospheres.

Filter or Air-Purifying Element: A component used in respirators to remove solid or liquid aerosols from the inspired air.

Filtering Facepiece: A particulate respirator with a filter as an integral part of the facepiece or with the entire facepiece composed of the filtering medium.

Fit Factor: A quantitative measure of the fit of a specific respirator facepiece to a particular individual.

Fit Test: Means the use of a protocol to qualitatively or quantitatively evaluate the fit of a respirator on an individual. (See also Qualitative fit test QLFT and Quantitative fit test QNFT.)

Gas: An aeriform fluid that is in a gaseous state at standard temperature and pressure.

Hazard ratio: A number obtained by dividing the concentration of a contaminant by its exposure limit.

High-Efficiency Particulate Air (HEPA) Filter: A filter that is at least 99.97% efficient in removing monodisperse particles of 0.3 micrometers in diameter. The equivalent NIOSH 42 CFR 84 particulate filters are the N100, R100, and P100 filters.

Hood or Helmet: is a respirator component which covers the wearer’s head and neck, or head, neck, and shoulders, and is supplied with incoming respirable air for the wearer to breathe. It may include a head harness and connection for a breathing tube.

Immediately Dangerous to Life or Health (IDLH): Conditions that pose an immediate threat to life or health or conditions that pose an immediate threat of severe exposure to contaminants, such as radioactive materials, which are likely to have adverse cumulative or delayed effects on health. (See subparagraph 3 on page 20 for more information on IDLH conditions).

Interior Structural Firefighting: The physical activity of fire suppression, rescue or both, inside of buildings or enclosed structures which are involved in a fire situation beyond the incipient stage.

Maximum Use Concentration (MUC): Maximum use concentration (MUC) means the maximum atmospheric concentration of a hazardous substance from which an employee can be expected to be protected when wearing a respirator, and is determined by the assigned protection factor of the respirator or class of respirators and the exposure limit of the hazardous substance. The MUC usually can be determined mathematically by multiplying the assigned protection factor specified for a respirator by the NIOSH recommended exposure limit (REL), permissible exposure limit, short term exposure limit, ceiling limit, peak limit, or any other exposure limit used for the hazardous substance.

Mist: A liquid condensation particulate.

Negative Pressure Respirator: A tight-fitting respirator in which the air pressure inside the facepiece is negative during inhalation with respect to the ambient air pressure outside the respirator.

Orinasal Respirator: A respirator that covers the nose and mouth and that generally consists of a quarter- or half-facepiece.

Oxygen Deficient Atmosphere: An atmosphere which contains an oxygen partial pressure of less than 148 millimeters of mercury (19.5 percent by volume at sea level).

Physician or Other Licensed Health Care Professional (PLHCP): Means an individual whose legally permitted scope of practice (i.e., license, registration, or certification) allows him or her to independently provide, or be delegated the responsibility to provide, some or all of the health care services required for medical evaluation to wear a respirator.

Planned or Unplanned Entry into an IDLH Environment, an Environment of Unknown Concentration of Hazardous Contaminant, or an Environment of Unknown Composition: A situation in which respiratory devices are recommended to provide adequate protection to workers entering an area where the contaminant concentration is above the IDLH or is unknown.

Potential Occupational Carcinogen: Any substance, or combination or mixture of substances, which causes an increased incidence of benign and/or malignant neoplasms, or a substantial decrease in the latency period between exposure and onset of neoplasms in humans or in one or more experimental mammalian species as the result of any oral, respiratory, or dermal exposure, or any other exposure which results in the induction of tumors at a site other than the site of administration. This definition also includes any substance that is metabolized into one or more potential occupational carcinogens by mammals (29 CFR 1990.103, OSHA Cancer Policy).

Powered Air-Purifying Respirator (PAPR): Means a device equipped with a facepiece, hood, or helmet, breathing tube, canister, cartridge, filter, canister with filter, or cartridge with filter, and a blower.

Pressure Demand Respirator: A respirator in which the pressure inside the facepiece in relation to the immediate environment is positive during both inhalation and exhalation.

Qualitative Fit Test (QLFT): A pass/fail fit test to assess the adequacy of respirator fit that relies on the individual's response to the test agent.

Quantitative Fit Test (QNFT): Means an assessment of the adequacy of respirator fit by numerically measuring the amount of leakage into the respirator.

Recommended Exposure Limit (REL): An 8- or 10-hour time-weighted average (TWA) or ceiling (C) exposure concentration recommended by NIOSH that is based on an evaluation of the health effects data.

Respirator: Means any device designed to provide the wearer with respiratory protection against inhalation of a hazardous atmosphere.

Respirator Program Administrator: The person responsible for all aspects of the respirator program with full authority to make decisions to ensure its success. The administrator must have sufficient knowledge (obtained by training or experience) to develop and implement the program. Preferably, he/she should have a background in industrial hygiene, safety, health care or engineering.

Respiratory Inlet Covering: The portion of a respirator that forms the protective barrier between the user's respiratory tract and an air-purifying device or breathing air source, or both. It may be a facepiece, a helmet, a hood, a suit, or a mouthpiece respirator with nose clamp.

Self-Contained Breathing Apparatus (SCBA): An atmosphere-supplying respirator for which the breathing air source is designed to be carried by the user.

Service Life: The length of time required for an air-purifying element to reach a specific effluent concentration. Service life is determined by the type of substance being removed, the concentration of the substance, the ambient temperature, the specific element being tested (cartridge or canister), the flow rate resistance, and the selected breakthrough value. The service life for a self-contained breathing apparatus (SCBA) is the period of time, as determined by the NIOSH certification tests, in which adequate breathing gas is supplied.

Simulated Workplace Protection Factor (SWPF): A surrogate measure of the workplace protection provided by a respirator.

Supplied-Air Respirator (SAR) or Airline Respirator: An atmosphere-supplying respirator for which the source of breathing air is not designed to be carried by the user.

Tight-Fitting Facepiece: A respiratory inlet covering that forms a complete seal with the face.

User Seal Check: An action conducted by the respirator user to determine if the respirator is properly seated to the face.

Vapor: The gaseous state of a substance that is solid or liquid at temperatures and pressures normally encountered.

Workplace Protection Factor (WPF): A measure of the protection provided in the workplace by a properly functioning respirator when correctly worn and used.



 
Book Cover - "NIOSH Respirator Selection Logic"

Chapter Index

Table of Contents
Foreword
Acknowledgments

Chapter I. Background and Purpose

Chapter II. Information and Restrictions

 

A. Criteria for Selecting Respirators
  B. Restrictions and Requirements for All Respirator Usage
Chapter III. Respirator Selection Logic Sequence
  Table 1. Particulate Respirators
  Table 2. Gas/Vapor Respirators
  Table 3. Combination Gas/Vapor & Particulate Respirators
Chapter IV. Escape Respirators
Chapter V. Additional Information on Hazards and Exposures

 

Subparagraph 1: Oxygen-Deficient Atmosphere
  Subparagraph 2: Exposure Limits
  Subparagraph 3: Immediately Dangerous to Life or Health (IDLH)
  Subparagraph 4: Eye Irritation

Chapter VI. Glossary of Respiratory Protection Terms

Appendix
 

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