Concrete cutting and surface prep generate high levels of respirable crystalline silica (RCS). Uncontrolled, exposures can exceed the HSE WEL of 0.1 mg/m³ within minutes. A planned, layered approach keeps dust down and work moving.
Plan the cut
- Choose methods that minimise dust: wet cutting where feasible, or shrouded tools with extraction when dry.
- Score first, cut second; slower passes reduce pluming and improve control.
- Prefabricate outdoors where possible and keep pour heights low for mixing.
Capture at source
- Use tool-mounted shrouds matched to an industrial M- or H-class vacuum with adequate airflow under load.
- Maintain seals, hoses and brushes; a 10 mm leak can halve capture efficiency.
- Using equipment such as the MAXVAC AGS-125 with appropriate extraction helps keep cutting efficient while limiting escape.
Capture in the air
- Run portable air scrubbers with H14 filtration to control background particulate, especially indoors.
- Create a one-way air path and, for room works, set temporary negative air to stop migration into occupied spaces.
Capture on surfaces
- Do not sweep or use compressed air. Vacuum debris and fines with a high-efficiency unit; manage slurry by containing, wet-vacuuming and disposing per site plan.
- Fit FFP3 or P3 RPE where exposures may approach limits and ensure face-fit.
Verify and maintain
- Spot-check with a PM meter; if readings remain high, slow the cut, improve extraction seals or add air changes.
- Clean or change filters before performance drops; log checks in the RAMS and COSHH file.
By combining source extraction, H14 air cleaning and no-sweep housekeeping, teams can keep RCS near or below the WEL while hitting programme and quality targets.
Speak with a Dust Expert
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