RI 2065 - Permeability of Oxygen Breathing Apparatus to Gasoline Vapors

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 5
- File Size:
- 438 KB
- Publication Date:
- Dec 1, 1919
Abstract
"1 Introduction The regrettable death of James S. Cunningham, Foreman Miner, attached to Bureau of Mines Rescue Car No. 2, while wearing a half-hour type oxygen breathing apparatus in a gasoline storage tank at Trinidad, Colorado, raised the question as to the possibility of gasoline vapors permeating the rubberized fabric of the breathing bags of such apparatus.It is known that most gases and especially certain organic vapors permeate rubber, by solution or a similar process. The rubber becomes saturated with the gas and if a concentration of gas is maintained on one side of the rubber sheet it slowly gives off gas from the other side. It of course takes some time for the gas to diffuse through the rubber and the length of time before it reaches the other side is proportional to the thickness of the rubber. The amount of gas that passes through per unit of area in unit time increases with the concentration of gas and also varies with the structure and composition of the rubber.It has been suggested that the gasoline vapor could not have penetrated into the interior of an oxygen breathing bag because the pressure is greater on the inside, but this is not true as the process of permeation by solution in the rubber is affected only by the difference in the partial pressures of gasoline vapor on the inside and outside of the bag. The positive oxygen pressure on the inside can only prevent the entrance of gasoline vapor through measurable holes, and has no effect on permeation by diffusion through the rubber."
Citation
APA:
(1919) RI 2065 - Permeability of Oxygen Breathing Apparatus to Gasoline VaporsMLA: RI 2065 - Permeability of Oxygen Breathing Apparatus to Gasoline Vapors. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1919.