basics of lasers and laser light laser beam injuries laser hazard classes laser safety standards...

41
by LASER-PROFESSION ALS Inc. W here the laser user comes first LASER SAFETY LASER SAFETY M ICRO M ICRO - - COURSE COURSE

Upload: hannah-pereira

Post on 26-Mar-2015

281 views

Category:

Documents


14 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Basics of Lasers and Laser Light Laser Beam Injuries Laser Hazard Classes Laser Safety Standards Laser Control Measures Laser-Professionals.com COURSE

by

LASER-PROFESSIONALS Inc.Where the laser user comes first

LASER SAFETYLASER SAFETYMICROMICRO--COURSECOURSE

Page 2: Basics of Lasers and Laser Light Laser Beam Injuries Laser Hazard Classes Laser Safety Standards Laser Control Measures Laser-Professionals.com COURSE

• Basics of Lasers and Laser Light• Laser Beam Injuries• Laser Hazard Classes• Laser Safety Standards• Laser Control Measures

Laser-Professionals.com

COURSE CONTENTS

Page 3: Basics of Lasers and Laser Light Laser Beam Injuries Laser Hazard Classes Laser Safety Standards Laser Control Measures Laser-Professionals.com COURSE

L L ight

A A mplification by

S S timulated

E E mission of

R R adiation

Laser-Professionals.com

BASICS OFLASERS AND LASER LIGHT

Page 4: Basics of Lasers and Laser Light Laser Beam Injuries Laser Hazard Classes Laser Safety Standards Laser Control Measures Laser-Professionals.com COURSE

WAVE NATURE OF LIGHT

Light is an electromagnetic wave.

Different wavelengths in the visible spectrum are seen by the eye as different colors.

Wavelength

Red: = 700 nm

Blue: = 400 nm

Laser-Professionals.com

Page 5: Basics of Lasers and Laser Light Laser Beam Injuries Laser Hazard Classes Laser Safety Standards Laser Control Measures Laser-Professionals.com COURSE

Radio

Long WavelengthShort Wavelength

Gamma Ray X-ray Ultraviolet Infrared Microwaves

Visible

ELECTROMAGNETIC SPECTRUM

Lasers operate in the ultraviolet, visible, and infrared.

Radio

Laser-Professionals.com

Page 6: Basics of Lasers and Laser Light Laser Beam Injuries Laser Hazard Classes Laser Safety Standards Laser Control Measures Laser-Professionals.com COURSE

STIMULATED EMISSION

Incident Photon

Excited Atom

Laser-Professionals.com

Stimulated Photon same wavelength same direction in phase

Incident Photon

Page 7: Basics of Lasers and Laser Light Laser Beam Injuries Laser Hazard Classes Laser Safety Standards Laser Control Measures Laser-Professionals.com COURSE

CHARACTERISTICS OF LASER LIGHT

MONOCHROMATIC

DIRECTIONAL

COHERENT

The combination of these three properties makes laser light focus 100 times better than ordinary light

Laser-Professionals.com

Page 8: Basics of Lasers and Laser Light Laser Beam Injuries Laser Hazard Classes Laser Safety Standards Laser Control Measures Laser-Professionals.com COURSE

LASER COMPONENTS

High ReflectanceMirror (HR)

Output CouplerMirror (OC)

ActiveMedium

Output Beam

Excitation Mechanism

Optical Resonator

Laser-Professionals.com

Page 9: Basics of Lasers and Laser Light Laser Beam Injuries Laser Hazard Classes Laser Safety Standards Laser Control Measures Laser-Professionals.com COURSE

HELIUM-NEON GAS LASER

Laser-Professionals.com

Courtesy of Metrologic, Inc.

Page 10: Basics of Lasers and Laser Light Laser Beam Injuries Laser Hazard Classes Laser Safety Standards Laser Control Measures Laser-Professionals.com COURSE

Rear Mirror

Adjustment Knobs

Safety Shutter Polarizer Assembly (optional)

CoolantBeamTube

AdjustmentKnob

OutputMirror

Beam

Beam Tube

HarmonicGenerator (optional)

Laser Cavity

PumpCavity

Flashlamps

Nd:YAGLaser Rod

Q-switch(optional)

Courtesy of Los Alamos National LaboratoryCourtesy of Los Alamos National Laboratory

NEODYMIUM YAG LASER

Laser-Professionals.com

Page 11: Basics of Lasers and Laser Light Laser Beam Injuries Laser Hazard Classes Laser Safety Standards Laser Control Measures Laser-Professionals.com COURSE

LASER SPECTRUM

10-13 10-12 10-11 10-10 10-9 10-8 10-7 10-6 10-5 10-4 10-3 10-2 10-1 1 10 102

LASERS

200 300 400 500 600 700 800 900 1000 1100 1200 1300 1400 1500 10600

Ultraviolet Visible Near Infrared Far Infrared

Gamma Rays X-Rays Ultra- Visible Infrared Micro- Radar TV Radio violet waves waves waves waves

Wavelength (m)

Wavelength (nm)

Nd:YAG 1064

GaAs 905

HeNe 633

Ar488/515

CO2 10600

XeCl 308

KrF248

2Nd:YAG 532

Retinal Hazard Region

ArF193

Communication Diode 1550

Ruby 694

Laser-Professionals.com

Alexandrite 755

Page 12: Basics of Lasers and Laser Light Laser Beam Injuries Laser Hazard Classes Laser Safety Standards Laser Control Measures Laser-Professionals.com COURSE

Laser-Professionals.com

LASER BEAM INJURIES

High power lasers can cause skin burns.

Lasers can cause severe eye injuriesresulting in permanent vision loss.

Page 13: Basics of Lasers and Laser Light Laser Beam Injuries Laser Hazard Classes Laser Safety Standards Laser Control Measures Laser-Professionals.com COURSE

SKIN BURN FROM CO2 LASER EXPOSURE

Accidental exposure to partial reflection of 2000 W CO2 laser beamfrom metal surface during cutting

Laser-Professionals.com

Page 14: Basics of Lasers and Laser Light Laser Beam Injuries Laser Hazard Classes Laser Safety Standards Laser Control Measures Laser-Professionals.com COURSE

TYPES OF LASER EYE EXPOSURE

EYE

INTRABEAM VIEWING

LASER

DIFFUSE REFLECTION

LASER

SCATTERED LIGHT

MIRROR

SPECULAR REFLECTION

LASER

REFLECTED BEAM

ROUGHSURFACE

Laser-Professionals.com

Page 15: Basics of Lasers and Laser Light Laser Beam Injuries Laser Hazard Classes Laser Safety Standards Laser Control Measures Laser-Professionals.com COURSE

HUMAN EYE

Choroid

Aqueous

Cornea

Macula

Optic Nerve

Sclera

Vitreous

RetinaLens

Laser-Professionals.com

Page 16: Basics of Lasers and Laser Light Laser Beam Injuries Laser Hazard Classes Laser Safety Standards Laser Control Measures Laser-Professionals.com COURSE

25

Photo courtesy of U S Air Force

THERMAL BURNSON

PRIMATE RETINA

Laser-Professionals.com

Page 17: Basics of Lasers and Laser Light Laser Beam Injuries Laser Hazard Classes Laser Safety Standards Laser Control Measures Laser-Professionals.com COURSE

MULTIPLE PULSE RETINAL INJURY

Laser-Professionals.com

Page 18: Basics of Lasers and Laser Light Laser Beam Injuries Laser Hazard Classes Laser Safety Standards Laser Control Measures Laser-Professionals.com COURSE

Photo courtesy of U S Army Center for Health Promotion and Preventive Medicine

EYE INJURY BY Q-SWITCHED LASERRetinal Injury produced by four pulses from a Nd:YAG laser range finder.

Laser-Professionals.com

Page 19: Basics of Lasers and Laser Light Laser Beam Injuries Laser Hazard Classes Laser Safety Standards Laser Control Measures Laser-Professionals.com COURSE

CAUSES OF LASER ACCIDENTS

Studies of laser accidents have shown that there are usually several contributing factors. The following are common causes of laser injuries:

• Inadequate training of laser personnel

• Alignment performed without adequate procedures

• Failure to block beams or stray reflections

• Failure to wear eye protection in hazardous situations

• Failure to follow approved standard operating procedures or safe work practices

Laser-Professionals.com

Page 20: Basics of Lasers and Laser Light Laser Beam Injuries Laser Hazard Classes Laser Safety Standards Laser Control Measures Laser-Professionals.com COURSE

NON-BEAM HAZARDS

Electrical Hazards

Smoke & Fumes

Mechanical Hazards

Process Radiation

Flashlamp Light

Chemical Hazards

Laser-Professionals.com

Page 21: Basics of Lasers and Laser Light Laser Beam Injuries Laser Hazard Classes Laser Safety Standards Laser Control Measures Laser-Professionals.com COURSE

LASER HAZARD CLASSES

Laser-Professionals.com

Lasers are classified according to the level of laser radiation that is accessible during normal operation.

Page 22: Basics of Lasers and Laser Light Laser Beam Injuries Laser Hazard Classes Laser Safety Standards Laser Control Measures Laser-Professionals.com COURSE

CLASS 1 • Safe during normal use• Incapable of causing injury• Low power or enclosed beam

CLASS I Laser Product

Label not required

May be higher class duringmaintenance or service

Nd:YAG Laser MarkerLaser-Professionals.com

Page 23: Basics of Lasers and Laser Light Laser Beam Injuries Laser Hazard Classes Laser Safety Standards Laser Control Measures Laser-Professionals.com COURSE

CLASS 2

CLASS II LASER PRODUCT

Laser RadiationDo Not Stare Into Beam

Helium Neon Laser1 milliwatt max/cw

• Staring into beam is eye hazard• Eye protected by aversion response• Visible lasers only• CW maximum power 1 mW

Laser Scanners

Laser-Professionals.com

Page 24: Basics of Lasers and Laser Light Laser Beam Injuries Laser Hazard Classes Laser Safety Standards Laser Control Measures Laser-Professionals.com COURSE

CLASS 3a

Small Beam

Expanded Beam

CLASS IIIa Laser Product

LASER RADIATION-AVOID DIRECT EYE EXPOSURE

ND:YAG 532nm5 milliwatts max/CW

• Aversion response may not provide adequate eye protection• CDRH includes visible lasers only• ANSI includes invisible lasers• CW maximum power (visible) 5 mW

Laser Pointers

Laser-Professionals.com

CLASS IIIa LASER PRODUCT

Laser Radiation-Do Not Stare Into Beam or ViewDirectly With Optical InstrumentsHelium Neon Laser

5 milliwatt max/cw

Page 25: Basics of Lasers and Laser Light Laser Beam Injuries Laser Hazard Classes Laser Safety Standards Laser Control Measures Laser-Professionals.com COURSE

CLASS 3b

• Direct exposure to beam is eye hazard• Visible or invisible• CW maximum power 500 mW

CLASS IIIb Laser Product

LASER RADIATION-AVOID DIRECT EXPOSURE TO BEAM

2 ND:YAG Wavelength: 532 nmOutput Power 80 mW

Courtesy of Sam’s Laser FAQ, www.repairfaq.org/sam/lasersam.htm, © 1994-2004

DPSS Laser with cover removed

Laser-Professionals.com

Page 26: Basics of Lasers and Laser Light Laser Beam Injuries Laser Hazard Classes Laser Safety Standards Laser Control Measures Laser-Professionals.com COURSE

CLASS 4

CLASS IV Laser Product

VISIBLE LASER RADIATION-AVOID EYE OR SKIN EXPOSURE TO DIRECT OR SCATTERED RADIATION

2 Nd:YAGWavelength: 532 nmOutput Power 20 W

• Exposure to direct beam and scattered light is eye and skin hazard• Visible or invisible• CW power >0.5 W• Fire hazard

Photo: Keith Hunt - www.keithhunt.co.ukCopyright: University of Sussex, Brighton (UK)Laser-Professionals.com

Page 27: Basics of Lasers and Laser Light Laser Beam Injuries Laser Hazard Classes Laser Safety Standards Laser Control Measures Laser-Professionals.com COURSE

The Federal Laser Product Performance Standard (FLPPS)

of the Center for Devices and Radiological Health (CDRH)

This is federal law and applies to the manufacture of lasers.

The American National Standard for Safe Use of Lasers (ANSI Z136.1)

This is a VOLUNTARY Standard that applies to the use of lasers.

It is “recognized by” :

The Occupational Safety and Health Administration

(OSHA)

IEC 60825 International Standard

LASER SAFETY STANDARDS

Laser-Professionals.com

Page 28: Basics of Lasers and Laser Light Laser Beam Injuries Laser Hazard Classes Laser Safety Standards Laser Control Measures Laser-Professionals.com COURSE

FEDERAL SAFETY REQUIREMENTS FOR CLASS 1 LASER SYSTEMS WITH ENCLOSED CLASS 3b AND 4 LASERS

Protective Housing prevents access to laser radiation above safe level.

Safety Interlocks terminate laser beam if protective housing in opened.

Only authorized personnel may operate laser with interlocks defeated.

Warning Labels alert personnel if opening the housing might expose a laser hazard.

Viewing Windows and Optics limit laser and collateral radiation to safe levels.

Laser-Professionals.com

Page 29: Basics of Lasers and Laser Light Laser Beam Injuries Laser Hazard Classes Laser Safety Standards Laser Control Measures Laser-Professionals.com COURSE

CDRH CLASS WARNING LABELS

CLASS II LASER PRODUCT

Laser RadiationDo Not Stare Into Beam

Helium Neon Laser1 milliwatt max/cw

CLASS IV Laser Product

VISIBLE LASER RADIATION-AVOID EYE OR SKIN EXPOSURE TO DIRECT OR SCATTERED RADIATION

Argon IonWavelength: 488/514 nmOutput Power 5 W

Class IIClass IIIa with expanded beam

Class IIIa with small beamClass IIIbClass IV

Laser-Professionals.com

Page 30: Basics of Lasers and Laser Light Laser Beam Injuries Laser Hazard Classes Laser Safety Standards Laser Control Measures Laser-Professionals.com COURSE

INTERNATIONAL LASERWARNING LABELS

Symbol and Border: BlackBackground: Yellow

Legend and Border: BlackBackground: Yellow

Laser-Professionals.com

INVISIBLE LASER RADIATIONAVOID EYE OR SKIN EXPOSURE

TO DIRECT OR SCATTERED RADIATIONCLASS 4 LASER PRODUCT

WAVELENGTH 10,600 nmMAX LASER POWER 200 W

EN60825-1 1998

Page 31: Basics of Lasers and Laser Light Laser Beam Injuries Laser Hazard Classes Laser Safety Standards Laser Control Measures Laser-Professionals.com COURSE

OVERVIEW OF ANSI Z136.1

1. MANAGEMENT APPOINTS LASER SAFETY OFFICER

2. LSO VERIFIES LASER CLASSIFICATION

3. LSO EVALUATES LASER HAZARDS

4. LSO SPECIFIES CONTROL MEASURES

ENGINEERING CONTROLS

ENCLOSURES

INTERLOCKS

WARNING SYSTEMS

ADMINISTRATIVE AND PROCEDURAL CONTROLS

AUTHORIZED PERSONNEL

STANDARD OPERATING PROCEDURE

TRAINING

PROTECTIVE EQUIPMENT

EYEWEAR

BARRIERS

Laser-Professionals.com

Page 32: Basics of Lasers and Laser Light Laser Beam Injuries Laser Hazard Classes Laser Safety Standards Laser Control Measures Laser-Professionals.com COURSE

LASER CONTROL MEASURES

Laser-Professionals.com

ANSI Section 4.1

“Control Measures shall be devised to reduce the possibility of exposure of the eye and skin to hazardous levels of laser radiation.”

Types of Control Measures

• Engineering

• Administrative

• Procedural

Page 33: Basics of Lasers and Laser Light Laser Beam Injuries Laser Hazard Classes Laser Safety Standards Laser Control Measures Laser-Professionals.com COURSE

Section 4.3.1.1

– Laser Controlled Area

– Eye Protection

– Barriers, Shrouds, Beam Stops, etc.

– Administrative and Procedural Controls

– Education and Training

Laser-Professionals.com

CONTROL MEASURES FOROPEN BEAM LASERS

Page 34: Basics of Lasers and Laser Light Laser Beam Injuries Laser Hazard Classes Laser Safety Standards Laser Control Measures Laser-Professionals.com COURSE

CLASS 4 LASER

ND:YAG 1064 nm100 Watts Max. Average Power

VISIBLE and/ or INVISIBLE LASER RADIATION-AVOID EYE OR SKIN EXPOSURE TO DIRECT OR SCATTERED RADIATION.

Controlled Area Warning SignLaser-Professionals.com

Page 35: Basics of Lasers and Laser Light Laser Beam Injuries Laser Hazard Classes Laser Safety Standards Laser Control Measures Laser-Professionals.com COURSE

LASER SAFETY EYEWEAR

Laser-Professionals.com

Page 36: Basics of Lasers and Laser Light Laser Beam Injuries Laser Hazard Classes Laser Safety Standards Laser Control Measures Laser-Professionals.com COURSE

EYEWEAR LABELS

All eyewear must be labeled with wavelength and optical density.

Laser-Professionals.com

Page 37: Basics of Lasers and Laser Light Laser Beam Injuries Laser Hazard Classes Laser Safety Standards Laser Control Measures Laser-Professionals.com COURSE

LASER PROTECTIVE BARRIER

Photo courtesy of

Laser-Professionals.com

Page 38: Basics of Lasers and Laser Light Laser Beam Injuries Laser Hazard Classes Laser Safety Standards Laser Control Measures Laser-Professionals.com COURSE

Laser-Professionals.com

The person operating the laser always has the primary

responsibility for all hazards associated with laser use.

WHO HAS PRIMARY RESPONSIBLITY FOR LASER SAFETY ANY TIME A CLASS 4 LASER IS OPERATED?

Page 39: Basics of Lasers and Laser Light Laser Beam Injuries Laser Hazard Classes Laser Safety Standards Laser Control Measures Laser-Professionals.com COURSE

• Most beam injuries occur during alignment.

• Only trained personnel may align class 3B or

class 4 lasers (NO EXCEPTIONS!)

• Laser safety eyewear is required for class 3B and

class 4 beam alignment.

• ANSI REQUIRES approved, written alignment

procedures for ALL class 4 laser alignment

activities and recommends them for class 3B.

SAFE BEAM ALIGNMENT

Laser-Professionals.com

Page 40: Basics of Lasers and Laser Light Laser Beam Injuries Laser Hazard Classes Laser Safety Standards Laser Control Measures Laser-Professionals.com COURSE

Operate class 3b and 4 lasers only in an area designed for

laser operation and be certain that the beam is terminated

on a diffuse beam block at the end of its use path.

Do not enter a designated Class 3b or Class 4 laser

controlled area (posted with a DANGER sign) without

approval from a qualified laser operator.

Always wear laser safety eyewear if a class 3b or class 4

invisible beam is accessible.

SAFE WORK PRACTICES

Laser-Professionals.com

Page 41: Basics of Lasers and Laser Light Laser Beam Injuries Laser Hazard Classes Laser Safety Standards Laser Control Measures Laser-Professionals.com COURSE

Thank you for promoting laser safety in your workplace.We hope you will consider us for your

laser safety training needs.

Check out our FREE laser hazard analysis software atwww.Laser-Professionals.com

Johnny Jones, President Laser-Professionals Inc. where the laser user comes first

Laser-Professionals.com