Register | Login | Set as Home Page | Bookmark | General Enquiries | Help | Saturday, 26th of May 2012
Health & Safety Matters
 hsmsearch.com
Search 
Magazine 
Register for our ENewsletter
Click to visit http://www.toyota-forklifts.co.uk/EN/resources/Pages/default.aspx
What next?
 Request further Information    visit web site     Send to friend
 Martor UK Ltd company's profile
Click to visit http://www.uvex-safety.co.uk/

Click to visit http://solutions.3m.co.uk/wps/portal/3M/en_GB/OccSafety/Home/Products_for/RespiratoryProtection/Particulate-Respirator/

Poll : May
Will you be getting involved in EU-OSHA's Healthy Workplaces campaign?
This is an anonymous poll for statistical purposes only
Last Month's Poll

In the wake of the "Jerry Can" advice controversy, should Francis Maude have quit?

Yes : 56%

No : 44%

Follow Health & Safety Matters on Twitter

Expert talks safe sensor use
November 1st 2010

Oxygen depletion sensors should not be used environments where the target gas is carbon dioxide, warns Tim Holmes, MD of Safety Gas Detection, manufacturer, installer and servicer of gas monitoring systems.

His assertion is that that use of oxygen depletion monitoring in environments such as university laboratories, pharmaceutical companies and the drinks industry is not sensitive enough for the detection of carbon dioxide. This means that levels of carbon dioxide may become dangerously high before the alarms are triggered.

Instead, Holmes recommends infra-red carbon dioxide sensors, the cost of which has plummeted in recent years.

Safety Gas Detection provides gas alarm systems that monitor the presence and depletion of a range of gases including carbon monoxide (CO), carbon dioxide (CO2), flammable gas, oxygen, refrigeration gas, and toxic gas.

More articles from Martor UK Ltd: