Monitoring turns dust control from guesswork into evidence. Whether you are verifying compliance with COSHH or checking if new extraction is effective, use a simple, repeatable approach focused on mg/m³ data.
Choose the right method
- Personal gravimetric sampling: filters worn in the breathing zone, analysed to give task or shift-average mg/m³. Use for compliance evidence.
- Real-time monitoring: PM1/2.5/10 readings to spot peaks and compare methods in minutes. Ideal for setting controls and training.
Real-time instruments such as Trolex monitors can provide continuous particulate readings to guide on-the-spot adjustments.
Plan the monitoring
- Define the question: shift exposure, task peak, or background level?
- Sample representative tasks, materials, and conditions (indoors vs outdoors, dry vs wet cutting).
- Calibrate and log: record start/stop times, tools, controls used, and any changes.
Act on the data
- Compare results to WELs (e.g., RCS 0.1 mg/m³ TWA). Set internal action levels below WEL to drive improvement.
- When peaks occur, move the air scrubber, improve tool extraction, or add temporary enclosures.
- Repeat measurements after changes to confirm improvement.
Common pitfalls to avoid
- Relying on free-airflow ratings; always check extraction performance under load.
- Sampling only on “good days”; include typical worst-case tasks.
- Ignoring housekeeping; settled dust can invalidate a clean reading later.
Practical takeaways
- Use personal sampling for compliance and real-time PM for rapid control tuning.
- Log tasks, tools, and controls against the readings.
- Trigger corrective action when results approach your internal limits.
Consistent, simple monitoring builds a feedback loop: better controls, clearer air, and demonstrable compliance.
Speak with a Dust Expert
Every site and project is different. If you’d like tailored guidance for your specific scenario, our Dust Experts are here to help.