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NPPTL  - The National Personal Protective Technology Laboratory

Statement of Standard for Full Facepiece Air Purifying Respirators (APR)

Guidelines for Identification of Test Configurations for Exposure to GB/HD and Part Number Change Guidelines

Guidelines for Identification of Test Configurations for Exposure to GB/HD

Guidelines for determining respirator configurations that need to be tested for agent resistance in accordance with sarin (GB) and mustard (HD) agent test provisions of the Statement of Standard for Chemical, Biological, Radiological and Nuclear (CBRN) Full-Facepiece Air Purifying Respirator (APR) are:

A. Unique parts, components and/or materials that form a pressure boundary between the breathing gas and the ambient environment need to be tested.

B. Unique parts, components and/or materials that have a direct effect on the ability of the
respirator to provide respiratory protection, such as a facepiece head-harness, need to be tested.

Warfare agents, sarin (GB) and distilled sulfur mustard (HD), are aggressive penetrating and permeating substances. In order to ensure the integrity of the respirator is maintained during and after exposure to these agents, all parts that form a boundary between the breathing gas and ambient conditions need to be tested. Pressure boundary parts identical in configuration but made from different materials need to be individually tested as separate respirator configurations. For example, the same facepiece made from two different materials, natural rubber and EPDM, would each need to be tested as separate respirator configurations.

Test agents can also attack materials causing them to deteriorate and fail. A facepiece head harness that fails during use could affect the user to facepiece seal. Consequently, head harnesses manufactured from different materials must be individually tested as separate respirator configurations.

Part Number Change Guidelines:

Design changes to components or parts that have a direct effect on the ability of the respirator to provide respiratory protection need to be evaluated to determine the need for a part number change. The evaluation needs to consider the forward and backward compatibility of the part or component both before and after the design change. If the part or component is not forward and backward compatible before and after the change, a new part number is required for the part or component and the NIOSH approved subassembly in which it is used.


Page last updated: March 17, 2003
Page last reviewed: June 06, 2004
Content Source: National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)