dust exposure monitoring News
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Ashtead Technology & TSI announce date for Air Quality Workshop
The instrumentation specialists Ashtead Technology and TSI will co-host a technical workshop on Dust and Air Quality Monitoring. The free-to-attend event will take place on Wednesday 27th January 2016 at TSI’s UK headquarters in High Wycombe. Ashtead’s Josh Thomas says: “This is a training event, designed to provide anyone with a professional interest in air quality with an ...
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New Casella microsite provides quick answers to workplace safety monitoring issues in key industry sectors
www.mycasellasolutions.com aimed at pharmaceutical, mining, chemical and petrochemical businesses Leading global specialist in industrial hygiene, occupational health and environmental monitoring equipment, Casella CEL (www.casellameasurement.com; 01234 844100), has launched a new micro website designed to give customers in consultancy and pharmaceutical, mining, chemical and petrochemical ...
By Casella
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Real-Time Dust Monitoring: what are the benefits for the workforce?
Approximately 14.8 million adults in the United States have been diagnosed with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) with an estimated 12 million people likely to have the condition, but not yet be diagnosed.[1] Many of these cases could be linked to occupational exposure from dangerous airborne dusts, fumes and other substances. Implementing workplace monitoring solutions could be the ...
By Casella
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British coal mines choose Casella’s intrinsically safe Tuff™ pump for underground dust monitoring
Bedford-based Casella CEL (www.casellameasurement.com; 01234 844100) has joined forces with Environmental Scientifics Group (ESG), the UK’s leading provider of testing, inspection and compliance services, to supply over 70 Intrinsically Safe (IS) TUFF™ pump for monitoring coal miners’ exposure to dust to seven mines across England and Wales. It is 60 years since Casella ...
By Casella
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ASTM D7201 - 06(2011) standard practice for sampling and counting airborne fibers, including asbestos fibers, in the workplace, by phase contrast microscopy (with an Option of Transmission Electron Microscopy)
Users of this practice must determine for themselves whether the practices described meet the requirements of local or national authorities regulating asbestos or other fibrous hazards. Variations of this practice have been described by the Asbestos Research Council in Great Britain (8), the Asbestos International Association (AIA) RTM 1 (9), NIOSH 7400, OSHA (Reference Method ID 160), and ISO ...
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