Newsom S W
J Clin Pathol. 1979 Jun;32(6):576-83. doi: 10.1136/jcp.32.6.576.
Nineteen open-fronted (class I) safety cabinets were subjected to spore containment and airflow tests, which suggested that a flow of 0.75 m/s was the minimum required for safe operation; further tests on three of the cabinets were repeated at different air speeds and confirmed this. The airflow is required to overcome the effect of laboratory or external air currents. Contamination of surfaces (including the operator's hands) by aerosols liberated inside the cabinets was investigated and found to depend more on turbulence within the cabinet (as from a restricted front opening) than on the number of air changes. The findings suggest that the product protection provided by a well-designed class I cabinet might equal that of a class II (laminar flow) unit.
对19个前开口式(I类)安全柜进行了孢子截留和气流测试,结果表明,安全运行所需的最低气流速度为0.75米/秒;对其中3个安全柜在不同风速下进行了重复测试,证实了这一点。需要气流来克服实验室或外部气流的影响。对安全柜内释放的气溶胶对表面(包括操作人员的手)的污染进行了调查,发现其更多地取决于安全柜内的湍流(如前开口受限所致),而非换气次数。研究结果表明,精心设计的I类安全柜所提供的产品保护可能与II类(层流)装置相当。