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Working Safely In Your Biological Safety Cabinet
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Working Safely In Your Biological Safety Cabinet

Jan 12, 2016

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Working Safely In Your Biological Safety Cabinet. Training Overview. Part I. HEPA & ULPA Filters Part II.Different Types of Cabinets Class I, Class II and Class III BSC Differences between A2 and B2 BSC International Standards Part III.Biosafety Cabinet Certification - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Working Safely In Your Biological Safety Cabinet

Working Safely In Your Biological Safety Cabinet

Page 2: Working Safely In Your Biological Safety Cabinet

Training Overview

Part I. HEPA & ULPA FiltersPart II. Different Types of Cabinets

Class I, Class II and Class III BSCDifferences between A2 and B2 BSCInternational Standards

Part III. Biosafety Cabinet CertificationPart IV. Common user mistakesPart V. Demonstration on how to use a BSC

Page 3: Working Safely In Your Biological Safety Cabinet

HEPA & ULPA Filter

HEPA: High Efficiency Particulate Air ULPA: Ultra Low Penetration Air

Important definitions:- HEPA: 99.99% - at 0.3 microns - ULPA: 99.999% - at 0.12 microns

Note: The “classical” definition of HEPA filter is 99.97% at 0.3 microns, but nowadays all BSC and LF in US use 99.99% at 0.3 m

Page 4: Working Safely In Your Biological Safety Cabinet

Particle Size Comparison

Page 5: Working Safely In Your Biological Safety Cabinet

HEPA/ULPA CapabilityRemoves a broad range of airborne contaminants:• Fine dust• Smoke• Bacteria (typical size: 500 to 0.3 micron)• Soot• Pollen• Radioactive particles • Impurity ion -> can affect Integrated Circuit speed

Page 6: Working Safely In Your Biological Safety Cabinet

Types of Cabinets

•Biohazard Safety Cabinet (BSC)

•Laminar Flow Cabinet (LFC)

•Fume Hood

Page 7: Working Safely In Your Biological Safety Cabinet

• Product protection (no personnel protection)• Not for biohazard agents or chemical fumes

Laminar Flow Cabinets

Page 8: Working Safely In Your Biological Safety Cabinet

• Class I BSC: Personnel and Environment Protection

• Class II & III BSC: Personnel, Product and Environment Protection

• HEPA filters (not for chemical vapours)

Biosafety Cabinets

Page 9: Working Safely In Your Biological Safety Cabinet

• Removes toxic chemical (ducting sys./ductless)• No HEPA filter -> not for biohazard agents

Fume Hoods

Page 10: Working Safely In Your Biological Safety Cabinet

Class 1 BSC• Only operator protection (not product)

• Biosafety level 1, 2, 3

• Inflow away from operator

• HEPA filtered exhaust to environment

• Current trend: to Class 2

Page 11: Working Safely In Your Biological Safety Cabinet

Class 2 A2

•Recirculating cabinet airflow

•No chemical / toxic vapours containment without ducting

•Approx. 70% recirculating and 30% exhaust

Exhaust Airflow approx. 30%

Room AirDownflow approx.

70%

Page 12: Working Safely In Your Biological Safety Cabinet

Class II Type A2 can’t be used for chemical vapours. Chemical vapour buildup in cabinet & lab is dangerous. Class II Type A2 BSC can be ducted using a non-airtight (thimble) duct.

Class II Type A2 BSC: Ducting

Thimble duct: have holes for room airBldg. exhaust fluctuations affect cabinet airflow

Page 13: Working Safely In Your Biological Safety Cabinet

Class II B2 BSC Airflow

Page 14: Working Safely In Your Biological Safety Cabinet

Class 2 Type B2

•Total exhaust cabinet (no recirculation)•Both biological and chemical vapor containment

•Care with chemical: should not destroy filter•High exhaust air volume•Interlock system: if building exhaust fails•Dedicated exhaust fan with dynamic balancing•Exhaust fan -> precisely match the cabinet: - airflow volume - static pressure•Inflow and downflow are opposite each other•High level of expertise for install & maintenance

Page 15: Working Safely In Your Biological Safety Cabinet

Class 2 Type B2 BSC: Airflow

Page 16: Working Safely In Your Biological Safety Cabinet

Class 3 BSC

Page 17: Working Safely In Your Biological Safety Cabinet

International Standards for Class II

• US Standard ANSI/NSF49

• European Standard EN12469

• Japanese Industrial Standard JIS K3800

• South African Standard SABS VC 8041:2001

• British Standard BS5726*

• German Standard DIN12950 Teil 10*

• French Standard NF X44-201:1984*

*now obsolete. Replaced with the harmonized EN12469

Page 18: Working Safely In Your Biological Safety Cabinet

Biosafety Cabinet Certification

Page 19: Working Safely In Your Biological Safety Cabinet

Biosafety Cabinet Certification

• The functional operation and integrity of each BSC should be certified to national or international performance standards at the time of installation and regularly thereafter by qualified technicians

• Evaluation of the effectiveness of cabinet containment should include tests for cabinet integrity, HEPA filter leaks, inflow/downflow velocity profile, air flow smoke pattern, and alarms and interlocks.

Page 20: Working Safely In Your Biological Safety Cabinet

No Test Field

EN & NSF Production

Per EN Production

Per NSF Type

Per EN Type

Per NSF 1 Inflow velocity √ √ √ √ √ 2 Downflow velocity √ √ √ √ √ 3 HEPA / ULPA filter leak test √ √ √ √ √ 4 Smoke pattern / airflow visualization √ √ √ √ √ 5 Site installation assessment (ex: alarm) √ √ √ √ √ 6 Light intensity √ √ √ √ 7 Noise level √ √ √ √ 8 Vibration level √ √ √ √ 9 Electrical safety testing to IEC 61010 √ √ √ √

10 Pressure retention / soap bubble √ √ √ 11 Microbiological personnel protection √ √ 12 Microbiological product protection √ √ 13 Microbiological cross-contamination √ √ 14 Microbiological performance envelope √ 15 Motor / blower performance √ 16 Drain spillage trough leakage √ 17 Resistance to overturning √ 18 Resistance to distortion √ 19 Resistance to deflection √ 20 Resistance to tipping √ 21 Secondary inflow velocity correlation to DIM √ 22 Powder coating chemical resistance √ 23 Powder coating abrasive resistance √ 24 Cabinet design evaluation √

Testing List

Page 21: Working Safely In Your Biological Safety Cabinet

Common User Mistakes

Page 22: Working Safely In Your Biological Safety Cabinet

Common User Mistakes

• Confusing a vertical laminar flow cabinet for a Class II BSC

• Failure to identify the type of BSC needed for their operations

• Class II B2 cabinet not necessarily “safer” than a Class II A2 cabinet (A2 cabinets can also be ducted out when necessary)

• Inappropriate choice of installation site / cabinet location

• Inappropriate usage / maintenance of the BSC

Page 23: Working Safely In Your Biological Safety Cabinet

Common User Mistakes: Illustration

Blocking of airflow perforations with objects

Page 24: Working Safely In Your Biological Safety Cabinet

Proper Installation / LocationExhaust filter area: Especially susceptible to disruptive air currents. Clearance of 40 cm (minimum) is recommended between the highest point of the cabinet and the ceiling.

Biosafety Cabinet

Barrier AirflowAir Inlet

Return Air Grille Personnel Traffic

Page 25: Working Safely In Your Biological Safety Cabinet

• Slow deliberate movements that will not disrupt airflow, minimize arm movement

• When an alarm is activated, do NOT use the cabinet

• After usage, wipe down the cabinet with cleaning agents

• Work as far into the cabinet as possible• Work starting from clean to “dirty” objects• Do not block airflow perforations with

objects/equipments

Proper Operation

Page 26: Working Safely In Your Biological Safety Cabinet

• Recommended recertification for BSC’s:

– Upon installation at customer’s site

– On-site annually in accordance with international standards

– When the cabinet is moved

Annual Testing

Page 27: Working Safely In Your Biological Safety Cabinet

• Germicidal UV lamps are not substitutes for proper cleaning of BSC workzone

• May cause performance degradation

• May compromise personnel safety when proper precautions are not taken

UV Lamps

Page 28: Working Safely In Your Biological Safety Cabinet

Bunsen Burners• The use of Bunsen burners in LFC and BSC

is discouraged• Compromises cabinet’s operator and cross-

contamination protection when used

Filter damage due to bunsen burner usage within workzone

Page 29: Working Safely In Your Biological Safety Cabinet

Reporting of accident/incident

• If there is a spillage in the BSC, notify the PI(s)/supervisor(s)/laboratory officer(s) immediately and decontaminate all objects in the cabinet without turning off the cabinet.

Page 30: Working Safely In Your Biological Safety Cabinet

Demonstration