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Occupational Exposure Limits

A Permissible Exposure Limit (PEL) is the legal limit of a chemical or physical agent a worker can be exposed to in an 8-hour day or 40-hour workweek according to OSHA. PELs are listed in OSHA's Standard 29CFR 1910.1000 and include limits for air contaminants, substances with ceiling levels, and mineral dust exposures. Employers must use formulas to calculate cumulative and equivalent exposures to ensure they do not exceed PEL limits over an 8-hour shift or for mixtures of contaminants. Administrative, engineering, and personal protective controls must be implemented to maintain exposures within permissible limits.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
69 views3 pages

Occupational Exposure Limits

A Permissible Exposure Limit (PEL) is the legal limit of a chemical or physical agent a worker can be exposed to in an 8-hour day or 40-hour workweek according to OSHA. PELs are listed in OSHA's Standard 29CFR 1910.1000 and include limits for air contaminants, substances with ceiling levels, and mineral dust exposures. Employers must use formulas to calculate cumulative and equivalent exposures to ensure they do not exceed PEL limits over an 8-hour shift or for mixtures of contaminants. Administrative, engineering, and personal protective controls must be implemented to maintain exposures within permissible limits.

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zeeshan ahmad
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© © All Rights Reserved
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Calculating Permissible Exposure Limits in Your Workplace

A Permissible Exposure Limit (PEL) is the legal limit of a chemical substance or


physical agent that a worker can be exposed to during a typical eight-hour day and a
standard 40-hour work week. OSHA created PELs to protect workers who operate in
potentially hazardous environments.
A listing of PELS can be found in OSHA’s Standard 29CFR 1910.1000. The Standard
includes three tables:
 Z-1 describes limits for air contaminants
 Z-2 describes limits for substances that have ceiling levels
 Z-3 describes limits to the exposure of mineral dust
The PELs listed in Table Z-1 are eight-hour Time Weighted Average (TWA) or Ceiling
Limits (C). TWA is the average exposure of a contaminant during a specified period of
time, usually eight hours. C is the maximum allowable continuous 15-minute exposure
period. Because the TWA is an average there could be times during an eight-hour shift
when an employee is exposed to concentrations higher than the established PELs.
Below is the formula used by OSHA to determine the cumulative exposure for an eight-
hour shift:

E = (Ca Ta+Cb Tb+. . .Cn Tn)÷8

E is the equivalent exposure for the working shift.

C is the concentration during any period of time (T) where the concentration remains
constant.

T is the duration in hours of the exposure at the concentration C.


The value of E shall not exceed the eight-hour time weighted average specified in
Subpart Z or 29 CFR Part 1910 for the substance involved.
An example with values inserted would be if an employee was exposed to Substance A
which has an eight-hour TWA of 100 ppm. The exposure is as follows:
Two hours exposure at 150 ppm, two hours at 75 ppm and two hours at 50ppm (2×150
+ 2×75 + 4×50)÷8 = 81.25 ppm . Because 81.25 ppm is less than the 100 ppm TLV
limit, the exposure is acceptable.
Determining the exposure in the case of a mixture of air contaminants the equivalent
exposure is calculated as follows:
Em=(C1÷L1+C2÷L2)+. . .(Cn÷Ln)

Em is the equivalent exposure for the mixture.

C is the concentration of a particular contaminant.

L is the exposure limit for that substance specified in Subpart Z of 29 CFR Part 1910.

The value of Em shall not exceed unity (1).


To illustrate the formula, values have been inserted to the contaminants below.

Actual concentration of Eight-hour TWA


Substance
eight-hour exposure (ppm) PEL (ppm)

B 500 1,000

C 45 200

D 40 200

 
Substituting in the formula, we have:

Em=500÷1,000+45÷200+40÷200
Em=0.500+0.225+0.200
Em=0.925
Because Em is less than unity (1), the exposure combination is within acceptable limits.
According to OSHA, when dealing with contaminant exposures to achieve compliance
in the workplace, administrative and/or engineering controls must first be determined
and implemented whenever feasible. If control measures are not feasible the next step
is to determine what personal protective equipment is required to help keep employee
exposure to the contaminants to the established limits. Use of this equipment must be
determined by a competent industrial hygienist or other technically qualified person.

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