Literature DB >> 25053700

Evaluation of pump pulsation in respirable size-selective sampling: Part III. Investigation of European standard methods.

Jhy-Charm Soo1, Eun Gyung Lee2, Larry A Lee1, Michael L Kashon3, Martin Harper1.   

Abstract

Lee et al. (Evaluation of pump pulsation in respirable size-selective sampling: part I. Pulsation measurements. Ann Occup Hyg 2014a;58:60-73) introduced an approach to measure pump pulsation (PP) using a real-world sampling train, while the European Standards (EN) (EN 1232-1997 and EN 12919-1999) suggest measuring PP using a resistor in place of the sampler. The goal of this study is to characterize PP according to both EN methods and to determine the relationship of PP between the published method (Lee et al., 2014a) and the EN methods. Additional test parameters were investigated to determine whether the test conditions suggested by the EN methods were appropriate for measuring pulsations. Experiments were conducted using a factorial combination of personal sampling pumps (six medium- and two high-volumetric flow rate pumps), back pressures (six medium- and seven high-flow rate pumps), resistors (two types), tubing lengths between a pump and resistor (60 and 90 cm), and different flow rates (2 and 2.5 l min(-1) for the medium- and 4.4, 10, and 11.2 l min(-1) for the high-flow rate pumps). The selection of sampling pumps and the ranges of back pressure were based on measurements obtained in the previous study (Lee et al., 2014a). Among six medium-flow rate pumps, only the Gilian5000 and the Apex IS conformed to the 10% criterion specified in EN 1232-1997. Although the AirChek XR5000 exceeded the 10% limit, the average PP (10.9%) was close to the criterion. One high-flow rate pump, the Legacy (PP=8.1%), conformed to the 10% criterion in EN 12919-1999, while the Elite12 did not (PP=18.3%). Conducting supplemental tests with additional test parameters beyond those used in the two subject EN standards did not strengthen the characterization of PPs. For the selected test conditions, a linear regression model [PPEN=0.014+0.375×PPNIOSH (adjusted R2=0.871)] was developed to determine the PP relationship between the published method (Lee et al., 2014a) and the EN methods. The 25% PP criterion recommended by Lee et al. (2014a), average value derived from repetitive measurements, corresponds to 11% PPEN. The 10% pass/fail criterion in the EN Standards is not based on extensive laboratory evaluation and would unreasonably exclude at least one pump (i.e. AirChek XR5000 in this study) and, therefore, the more accurate criterion of average 11% from repetitive measurements should be substituted. This study suggests that users can measure PP using either a real-world sampling train or a resistor setup and obtain equivalent findings by applying the model herein derived. The findings of this study will be delivered to the consensus committees to be considered when those standards, including the EN 1232-1997, EN 12919-1999, and ISO 13137-2013, are revised. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the British Occupational Hygiene Society 2014.

Entities:  

Keywords:  EN 1232-1997; EN 12919-1999; ISO 13137-2013; personal sampling pumps; pump fluctuation; pump pulsation; respirable particle sampling

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2014        PMID: 25053700      PMCID: PMC4702258          DOI: 10.1093/annhyg/meu047

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Occup Hyg        ISSN: 0003-4878


  3 in total

1.  A personal air sampler.

Authors:  R J SHERWOOD; D M GREENHALGH
Journal:  Ann Occup Hyg       Date:  1960-07

2.  Evaluation of pump pulsation in respirable size-selective sampling: part II. Changes in sampling efficiency.

Authors:  Eun Gyung Lee; Taekhee Lee; Seung Won Kim; Larry Lee; Michael M Flemmer; Martin Harper
Journal:  Ann Occup Hyg       Date:  2013-09-24

3.  Evaluation of pump pulsation in respirable size-selective sampling: part I. Pulsation measurements.

Authors:  Eun Gyung Lee; Larry Lee; Carsten Möhlmann; Michael M Flemmer; Michael Kashon; Martin Harper
Journal:  Ann Occup Hyg       Date:  2013-09-24
  3 in total
  1 in total

1.  Selection of metric for indoor-outdoor source apportionment of metals in PM2.5 : mg/kg versus ng/m3.

Authors:  Pat E Rasmussen; Christine Levesque; Owen Butler; Marc Chénier; H David Gardner
Journal:  Indoor Air       Date:  2021-08-21       Impact factor: 6.554

  1 in total

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