Return to Respiratory Advisor Homepage Respiratory Protection Advisor
 Respirator
Change Schedule
 Experimental
Testing
 Manufacturer
Recommendations
Factors That Reduce Service Life
 A New Standard
 Using a
Math Model
 The Advisor Genius
 The Wood Math
Model Table

 

User Guide
Site Map
Comments

Rule of Thumb
Rule of Thumb
Experimental work can allow for a generalization or "rule of thumb" that broadly defines the service life of cartridges exposed to chemicals.  One such Rule of Thumb for estimating organic vapor cartridge service life is found in chapter 36 of the AIHA publication "The Occupational Environment – Its Evaluation and Control."
It suggests that:
If the chemical's boiling point is > 70 °C and the concentration is less than 200 ppm you can expect a service life of 8 hours at a normal work rate.

Service life is inversely proportional to work rate.

Reducing concentration by a factor of 10 will increase service life by a factor of 5.

Humidity above 85% will reduce service life by 50%

These generalizations should only be used in concert with one of the other methods of predicting service life for specific contaminants.

Return to Respiratory Advisor Homepage

tracking image