ANSI ESTA E1.40-2016 Recommendations for the Planning of Theatrical Dust Effects.pdf
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1、ANSI E1.40 - 2016Recommendations for the Planning ofTheatrical Dust EffectsF 100 employees/members)Columbus McKinnonETCLDIProSight Specialty InsuranceUnited States Institute for Theatre TechnologyVISIONARY ($5,000 20100 employees/members)Altman Lighting, Inc. JR ClancyVISIONARY ($500 100 employees/m
2、embers)Barbizon ElectricLexRosco LaboratoriesTexas Scenic CompanyINVESTOR ($1,500$4,999; 20100 employees/members)American Society of Theatre Consultants H 100 employees/members)Ian Foulds, IATSE Local 873IATSE Local 80PSAVSUPPORTER ($1,500; 20100 employees/members)Blizzard Lighting, LLCLycian Stage
3、LightingOasis Stage WerksStage Equipment 20 employees/members)Milton DavisMichael LayNiscon Inc.Skjonberg Controls Inc.*Investor for over 15 yearsChristopher B. TiltonTracy UnderhillKen VanniceAll donations to the TSP support the Technical Standards Program in general and are not directed to or for
4、the benefit of any particular technical standard project or any Working Group working on any particular standard or project. If you would like to help support the Technical Standards Program in its work, please consider becoming an Investor in Innovation by visiting our website at http:/tsp. est a.o
5、rg/invest or contacting standardsesta.org. 2016 ESTA F However, they are also used in theatricalproductions and within theme parks. The use of dust in this manner raises concerns for potential hazards including combustibility and health effects from inhalation or ingestion, which, although well know
6、n in some sectors of the industry, are poorly understood in others. This document provides recommendations for how to plan the use and assess the safety of such effects. 2 IntroductionThe word dust is non-specific and means different things to different people. Dust is used in this documentas a gene
7、ric term referring to any solid particles scattered or suspended in the air where the common denominator is the use to which it is put, as a set dressing or as a special effect. Dust can be used in small quantities, such as to sprinkle on books or props to age them or to enhance artificial cobwebs,
8、all the way up to extensive use on film sets where a complete realistic environment is being created. Dust use in film sets for special effects is very common, and the users in that industry are usually more familiar with the techniques than those in theatrical venues. However, the same basic princi
9、ples of safe operation apply to everyone, no matter the application.3 Major Categories of DustThe dust used in theatrical effects generally can be broken down into three major categoriesplant and animal-based, mineral, and syntheticdepending on the source of the dust.3.1 Plant and animal-basedPlant
10、and animal-based dusts are those based on naturally occurring products from plants or animals. Examples of common products derived from plants or animals that have been used as a theatrical dust effect include wheat flour, rice flour, rice gluten, corn starch, coffee creamers, and crushed nutshells.
11、 3.2 MineralMineral-based dusts include fullers earth, kaolin, aluminum magnesium silicate, pyrolite, pyrophyllite, and diatomaceous earth. Diatomaceous earth is the fossilized remains of diatoms and hard-shelled algae, so it could be classified as a plant or animal-based dust, but fossilization lea
12、ves only the mineral remains of those life-forms, particularly silica, behind in the diatomaceous earth.3.3 SyntheticThere are many synthetic products that might be used to make dust. Colored dyes, ground plastics, and extremely high density glycols, such as polyethylene glycol 3350, might be among
13、the things considered for dust effects. Note: None of these classifications (plant and animal-based, mineral, or synthetic) is inherently safer than another. For example, wood dust is a plant product, but most wood dusts are confirmed carcinogens. Titanium dioxide is a white pigment that is found in
14、 minerals such as rutile and anatase. (Rutile is about 98% titanium dioxide.) The International Agency for Research on Cancer has classified it as a group 2B carcinogen based on inhalation studies. F common materials such as flour can be highly explosive when finely dispersed in the air. OSHA 3371-0
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