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Original Articles

Monitoring of Formaldehyde in Air

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Pages 578-584 | Published online: 04 Jun 2010
 

Abstract

Any one of several monitoring methods, depending on requirement and circumstance, can be used to measure employee exposure to formaldehyde. Ordinarily, monitoring at DuPont is performed by sampling with impingers containing 1% aqueous sodium bisulfite or with silica gel tubes. The collected formaldehyde is measured spectrophotometrically after reaction with chromotropic acid. Results from studies on a selected number of formaldehyde monitoring methods reveal that reliable methods are available for area and personnel monitoring over both short term and long term. Accurate results are obtained from short-term monitoring (15 min at 1 L/min) with impingers of formaldehyde concentrations as low as 0.14 ppm. The current studies show that long-term monitoring (8 hr at 0.5 L/min) can be performed accurately at concentrations as low as 0.05 ppm. Accurate results also are obtained from short-term monitoring (15 min at 500 mL/min) with silica gel tubes of concentrations as low as 0.11 ppm formaldehyde; the lower limit established in the current studies for long-term monitoring (8 hr at 30 mL/min) is 0.15 ppm. Passive monitors provide the most convenient means of obtaining 8-hour time-weighted average (TWA) data. The Pro-Tek® Formaldehyde Badge was demonstrated to reliably monitor formaldehyde concentrations varying from 0–0.5 ppm or 0–3 ppm. All of these methods satisfy the NIOSH criterion for acceptability that all results fall within ±25% of the true value at the 95% confidence level. Investigation of the Lion Formaldemeter disclosed that instantaneous and accurate (±5%) measurement of formaldehyde in air can be made over a concentration range of 0.3–5 ppm in the absence of other substances that are oxidizable in its fuel cell detector.

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