Current through Register 2022 Notice Reg. No. 16, April 25, 2022
This appendix establishes requirements for sampling
protocols and the procedure for taking and analyzing air samples for diacetyl
including quality control procedures that must be implemented by the person
conducting the sampling and by the laboratories performing the analysis. All
employers who are required to conduct air monitoring under subsection (c) of
this section are required to utilize analytical laboratories that use this
procedure, or an equivalent method, for collecting and analyzing
samples.
(a) Sampling Protocols.
(1) Personal Samples
(A) 8-hour time-weighted average. Due to the
limited sampling time for the OSHA Method, eight-hour time-weighted average
(TWA) exposure estimates must be constructed for each employee. Collect
sequential samples as recommended by the OSHA Method or an equivalent method
for periods no longer than 180 minutes per sample to cover the full work-shift
of the employee. For an eight-hour work shift, this will include the collection
of a minimum of three dual-tube samples for each employee unless the full
duration of the employee's exposure to diacetyl or diacetyl-containing
flavorings or food products is less than the full work shift. Cleaning and
sanitizing activities must be sampled separately from production
processes.
(B) Short-term exposure.
Collect short term exposure samples as recommended by the OSHA Method or an
equivalent method, to represent the highest likely potential 15 minute
exposure(s) for each process. Examples of activities that should be monitored
for short term exposures include periods of a process in which tanks or
containers are opened, filled, unloaded or cleaned; where process equipment is
opened; and where diacetyl or diacetyl-containing flavorings or food products
are heated or sprayed.
(2) Monitoring for verification of enclosed
processes or to determine whether respirators need not be required in a
regulated area.
(A) Eight-hour TWA and short
term exposure personal samples, in accordance with section (a)(1), shall be
collected for each shift and each job classification for employees in the area
where process vessels or operations are located.
(B) Area samples shall also be collected by
the placement of samplers in the areas the program reviewer determines likely
to have the highest levels of airborne diacetyl. A minimum of four locations
shall be sampled for each process. The employer shall record the nature of and
location of the process being sampled, the location of the sampler, the time
and date of the sampling, the measured air concentration from the dual-tube
samples, the method RQL for the sample, and evidence of its accuracy, including
the ambient temperature and humidity.
(C) If any individual sample collected in the
course of testing to verify that a system is enclosed is determined to contain
diacetyl above the OSHA RQL, then the process shall not be deemed enclosed. If
any individual sample collected in the course of testing to determine if
respirator use must be required in a regulated area is determined to contain
diacetyl above the OSHA RQL, then respirator use shall be required in the
regulated area.
(3) This
sampling protocol cannot be used as the sole basis for respirator selection in
a regulated area if diacetyl-containing powders are used in the regulated
area.
(b) Sampling
Procedure.
(1) Samples shall be collected
using a personal sampling pump calibrated prior to and after each day of
sampling, with a representative sampling train attached between the pump and
the calibration device, to within + 5% of the recommended flow rate specified
in the OSHA Method or in the equivalent method selected. In the OSHA Method the
tubes must be wrapped in aluminum foil (or a special tube cover used) to
protect the sampling devices from light, especially sunlight, during sampling,
storage and handling.
(2) Review
and follow the sampling procedures in the OSHA Method or in the equivalent
method selected. The sampling procedure shall also include the following:
(A) Record sample air volumes (liters),
sampling time (minutes) and sampling rate (mL/min) for each sample, along with
any potential interference(s) on a sample summary form.
(B) Personal samples shall be taken in the
"breathing zone" of the employee (i.e., attached near the collar or lapel near
the worker's face). The sampler inlet shall be located outside of the
respirator, and outside of any personal protective equipment or clothing, and
there shall be no impediment to airflow into the sampler.
(C) Each set of samples taken will include
10% field blanks or a minimum of one field blank, whichever is greater. These
blanks must come from the same lot as the tubes used for sample collection.
Handle the blank sample in the same manner as the other samples except draw no
air through it. A set consists of any sample or group of samples for which an
evaluation for this standard must be made. Any samples represented by a field
blank having an excess of the limit of detection (LOD) of the method being used
shall be rejected, and additional sampling conducted to represent that
exposure.
(c)
Analytical Procedures.
(1) All samples shall
be analyzed by a laboratory accredited in accordance with the program of the
American Association for Laboratory Accreditation.
(2) The laboratory shall analyze all samples
using the OSHA Method or an equivalent method.
(3) Each sampling tube shall be analyzed
separately, and the results recorded. For each sampling tube, the employer
shall ensure that the record includes the date, time, location and identity of
the process being sampled, the name and employee identifier of the employee
being sampled, the employee's job classification, the specific job duties of
the employee, and the mass collected from the tube. The records for each
dual-tube sample shall include the measured air concentration from the
dual-tube samples, the method RQL for the sample, field evidence of its
accuracy, including ambient temperature and humidity, and any comments from the
analytical laboratory pertaining to the accuracy of the sample. The record for
short term exposure samples shall also identify the specific activity being
sampled.
(4) All laboratories as
part of their accreditation shall participate in an appropriate national sample
testing scheme such as the Proficiency Analytical Testing Program (PAT) for
organics that is sponsored by the American Industrial Hygiene Association
(AIHA).
Notes
Cal. Code Regs.
Tit. 8, 5197 app
A
Note: Authority cited: Section
142.3, Labor
Code. Reference: Section
142.3, Labor
Code.
1. Renumbering of
former section 6004 and accompanying Appendix A to new section 3341 and
Appendix A and amendment of Appendix A filed 2-5-97; operative 3-7-97 (Register
97, No. 6).
2. Change without regulatory effect providing more
legible illustration of Biological Hazard Symbol Configuration filed 2-9-2009
pursuant to section 100, title 1, California Code of Regulations (Register
2009, No. 7).