Floyd Evan L, Henry J Blake, Johnson David L
a Department of Occupational and Environmental Health , University of Oklahoma College of Public Health , Oklahoma City , Oklahoma.
J Occup Environ Hyg. 2018 Apr;15(4):334-340. doi: 10.1080/15459624.2017.1416388.
OSHA regulations state that an employer shall not permit tight-fitting respirators to be worn by employees who have facial hair that comes between the skin and facepiece seal. Studies have shown that facial hair in the face seal zone can increase penetration and decrease the fit factor (FF), although the relationship between the amount and characteristics of facial hair and the increase in penetration is not well quantified. This article examines the influence of facial hair length, areal density, and coarseness on FF for one model of half-face elastomeric negative-pressure air purifying respirator.
Quantitative fit tests (QNFT) were performed on 19 subjects with beards initially 0.500-in long and subsequently trimmed to 0.250, 0.125, and 0.063 in, then after a razor shave. Three fit tests were performed at each of the 5 lengths, for 285 total tests. The average diameter and areal density of cheek and chin hair were measured. Penetration was modeled as a function of hair length category, beard areal density, and hair coarseness.
FF decreased with beard length, especially beyond 0.125 in. However, passing FF scores were achieved on all tests by all subjects at the smooth shave and 0.063 in conditions, and 98% of tests were passed at 0.125 in; seven subjects passed all tests at all conditions. Chin and cheek areal densities were significantly different and were only weakly correlated. Beard hair diameters were normally distributed across subjects (mean 76 µm, standard deviation 7.4 µm). Beard length and areal density, but not coarseness, were statistically significant predictors of fit using an arcsine transformed penetration model. FF decreased with increasing beard length, especially beyond 0.125 in, although FF with a "stubble" beard did not differ significantly from a smooth shave. FF also decreased with increasing areal beard hair density.
Beard length and areal density negatively influence FF. However, tight-fitting half-face negative-pressure respirator fit tests can achieve adequate fit factor scores even with substantial facial hair in the face seal area.
美国职业安全与健康管理局(OSHA)的规定指出,雇主不得允许面部毛发夹在皮肤与面罩密封处之间的员工佩戴紧身呼吸器。研究表明,面部密封区域的面部毛发会增加穿透率并降低适配系数(FF),尽管面部毛发的数量和特征与穿透率增加之间的关系尚未得到很好的量化。本文研究了一种半脸弹性体负压空气净化呼吸器模型中面部毛发长度、面密度和粗糙度对FF的影响。
对19名留胡须的受试者进行了定量适配测试(QNFT),胡须初始长度为0.500英寸,随后修剪至0.250、0.125和0.063英寸,然后进行剃须。在这5个长度下,每个长度进行3次适配测试,共进行285次测试。测量了脸颊和下巴毛发的平均直径和面密度。将穿透率建模为毛发长度类别、胡须面密度和毛发粗糙度的函数。
FF随胡须长度的增加而降低,尤其是超过0.125英寸时。然而,在光滑剃须和0.063英寸的条件下,所有受试者在所有测试中都达到了通过FF分数,在0.125英寸时98%的测试通过;7名受试者在所有条件下都通过了所有测试。下巴和脸颊的面密度有显著差异,且相关性较弱。受试者的胡须毛发直径呈正态分布(平均76微米,标准差7.4微米)。使用反正弦变换穿透模型,胡须长度和面密度是适配的统计学显著预测因子,但粗糙度不是。FF随胡须长度的增加而降低,尤其是超过0.125英寸时,尽管“胡茬”胡须的FF与光滑剃须的FF没有显著差异。FF也随胡须毛发面密度的增加而降低。
胡须长度和面密度对面部适配系数有负面影响。然而,即使面部密封区域有大量面部毛发,紧身半脸负压呼吸器适配测试仍可获得足够的适配系数分数。