Hexavalent Chromium Testing Laboratory
AIHA LAP accredited laboratory specializing in hexavalent chromium testing. Airborne Cr(VI) personal monitoring by NIOSH 7605 ion chromatography on Na₂CO₃-impregnated filters — refrigerated chain of custody required. OSHA 1910.1026 action level (2.5 µg/m³) and PEL (5 µg/m³) compliance. Cr(VI) wipe sampling, bulk coating analysis.
Hexavalent chromium is an IARC Group 1 confirmed human carcinogen — it causes lung cancer with no known safe exposure threshold, and OSHA 1910.1026 is strictly enforced
IARC Group 1 — Confirmed Human Carcinogen
Cr(VI) compounds are classified as IARC Group 1 (confirmed human carcinogens). Epidemiological studies of chrome platers and stainless steel welders demonstrate significantly elevated lung cancer mortality at occupational exposure levels. Hexavalent chromium testing quantifies this specific risk.
NIOSH REL Is 25× More Protective Than OSHA PEL
OSHA's PEL is 5 µg/m³. NIOSH REL is 0.2 µg/m³ — 25× more protective. This gap exists because OSHA's PEL was set using economic and feasibility constraints, not purely on health risk. Routine hexavalent chromium testing ensures you understand true worker health risk beyond baseline OSHA compliance.
Speciation Is Required — Total Cr Is Not Sufficient
OSHA 1910.1026 requires monitoring specifically for hexavalent chromium, not total chromium. NIOSH 7300 (ICP, total chromium) cannot distinguish Cr(VI) from Cr(III) — using it for compliance monitoring is analytically invalid. Proper hexavalent chromium testing uses dedicated Na₂CO₃-impregnated filters.
Stainless Steel Welding Is the Most Common Industrial Source
When the chromium content of stainless steel alloys is heated to welding temperatures, Cr(III) in the base metal is oxidized to Cr(VI) in the welding fume. Any welder working on stainless steel requires hexavalent chromium testing to verify exposure controls are adequate.
IARC Group 1 Human Carcinogen
The International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) classifies hexavalent chromium compounds as Group 1 — sufficient evidence of human carcinogenicity. Studies of chrome platers, chromate pigment workers, and stainless steel welders show significantly elevated lung cancer rates. Cr(VI) also causes nasal septum perforation ("chrome ulcers") through direct corrosive action, and characteristic painless skin ulcers ("chrome holes") at sites of dermal contact.
OSHA 1910.1026 (General Industry) & 1926.1126 (Construction)
OSHA's Cr(VI) standard is one of the most comprehensive substance-specific standards in general industry. Any operation generating airborne Cr(VI) — stainless steel welding, chrome plating, coating disturbance, abrasive blasting on chromate-painted surfaces — requires initial air monitoring. Exceeding the limits below triggers medical surveillance, engineering controls, respiratory protection, and a written Cr(VI) compliance program.
NIOSH 7300 Total Chromium Cannot Satisfy OSHA 1910.1026 — Speciation Is Required
This is the single most important technical point in hexavalent chromium testing. Many facilities receive air monitoring reports showing "chromium detected" from NIOSH 7300 (ICP total metal scan) and assume this satisfies OSHA 1910.1026 compliance requirements. It does not.
⚠ Critical: NIOSH 7300 (Total Chromium) Is Analytically Invalid for OSHA 1910.1026 Compliance
NIOSH 7300 uses strong acid digestion (HNO₃/HCl) which destroys Cr(VI) speciation — all chromium is converted to a single ionic state during digestion. The result cannot distinguish Cr(VI) (human carcinogen, OSHA PEL 5 µg/m³) from Cr(III) (essential nutrient, no OSHA PEL). A total chromium result of 10 µg/m³ could mean 10 µg/m³ of Cr(VI) (double the PEL) or 10 µg/m³ of Cr(III) (no regulatory concern) — there is no way to know from a NIOSH 7300 result alone. Additionally, MCE filters used for NIOSH 7300 do not preserve Cr(VI) speciation — Cr(VI) reduces to Cr(III) during acid digestion, making retrospective speciation impossible. Use NIOSH 7605 with Na₂CO₃-impregnated PVC filters from the start.
NIOSH 7300 / 7303 — Total Chromium (ICP)
Total metal scan by ICP-AES or ICP-MS from MCE filter acid digest. Quantifies all chromium present regardless of oxidation state. Cannot be compared to OSHA 1910.1026 PEL or action level for Cr(VI).
- Cannot distinguish Cr(VI) from Cr(III)
- Acid digestion destroys oxidation state speciation
- MCE filter does not stabilize Cr(VI) — reduction occurs
- Result cannot be compared to 5 µg/m³ PEL for Cr(VI)
- Does not satisfy OSHA 1910.1026 monitoring requirement
- Useful only for total chromium in a non-Cr(VI) context
NIOSH 7605 — Hexavalent Chromium Testing by Ion Chromatography
Cr(VI)-specific collection on Na₂CO₃-impregnated PVC filter at 1–4 L/min. Alkaline buffer preserves Cr(VI) speciation. Phosphate buffer extraction + IC (UV at 365 nm or post-column DPC colorimetry) quantifies Cr(VI) specifically.
- Cr(VI)-specific — result directly compared to 5 µg/m³ PEL
- Na₂CO₃ filter stabilizes Cr(VI) — prevents reduction
- Refrigerate immediately at 4°C · ship on ice overnight
- 14-day maximum hold time refrigerated
- Satisfies OSHA 1910.1026 monitoring requirement
- AGT Labs preferred method — AIHA LAP accredited
Hexavalent Chromium Testing Methods — All In-House at AGT Labs
AGT Labs performs all hexavalent chromium testing methods in-house. No third-party instrument routing — faster turnaround and continuous chain of custody from filter receipt to report.
Ion Chromatography (IC) — Cr(VI) Speciation
Cr(VI) is collected on a sodium carbonate (Na₂CO₃) / sodium hydroxide (NaOH) impregnated PVC filter at 1–4 L/min. The alkaline impregnation stabilizes Cr(VI) in its hexavalent state during sampling and holding. Filters are extracted in phosphate buffer solution and the Cr(VI)-specific chromate ion is separated by IC and quantified by UV absorbance at 365 nm or by post-column reaction with 1,5-diphenylcarbazide (DPC). This is the OSHA-accepted primary method for hexavalent chromium testing under 1910.1026.
⚠ Refrigeration Required: Seal filters immediately post-sampling. Refrigerate at 4°C. Ship overnight on ice packs to AGT Labs. Warm samples may show artificially low Cr(VI) due to reduction — note ambient conditions on COC.
Colorimetric (1,5-Diphenylcarbazide)
The classic OSHA ID-103 and NIOSH 7600 colorimetric method uses the highly specific reaction of 1,5-diphenylcarbazide (DPC) with Cr(VI) to form a reddish-purple complex quantified by UV-Vis spectrophotometry at 540 nm. Collection on Na₂CO₃-impregnated PVC filter or glass fiber filter (OSHA ID-215). The DPC reaction is highly selective for Cr(VI) — Cr(III) does not react. Sensitivity is comparable to IC but may be less precise at concentrations near the action level (2.5 µg/m³) compared to NIOSH 7605 IC.
Bulk Coating Cr(VI) — Alkaline Digest + IC
Bulk analysis of paint chips, primers, and coating materials to determine Cr(VI) content. Chromate-based primers (zinc chromate, strontium chromate, barium chromate) are widely used in aerospace, defense, marine, and industrial corrosion-protection coatings. Coating samples are extracted in alkaline phosphate buffer (preserving Cr(VI) speciation — NOT acid digested) and analyzed by IC. Results reported as µg/g or % Cr(VI) by weight. Critical for renovation, abatement planning, and OSHA classification before disturbance.
From Stainless Steel Welding Fume to Chrome Plating Mist — Three Sample Types in One Accredited Lab
AGT Labs performs all three hexavalent chromium testing categories from a single AIHA LAP accredited Houston facility — personal breathing-zone air monitoring (NIOSH 7605), surface wipe sampling (NIOSH 9102), and bulk coating analysis (alkaline extraction IC). Every report includes comparison to OSHA action level, OSHA PEL, and NIOSH REL.
- Personal breathing-zone hexavalent chromium testing — NIOSH 7605 IC, Na₂CO₃ PVC filter
- Short-term exposure (STEL) sampling during peak-exposure tasks — grinding, cutting, plating operations
- Area monitoring at welding stations, plating bath rims, ventilation exhausts
- Cr(VI) wipe sampling — work surfaces, equipment, hygiene areas (NIOSH 9102)
- Bulk chromate primer and coating analysis — zinc chromate, strontium chromate by alkaline IC
- Post-engineering-control verification — quantify LEV effectiveness at Cr(VI) welding operations
Where Operations Require Hexavalent Chromium Testing
Stainless Steel Welding & Thermal Cutting
The most common industrial Cr(VI) exposure source. When stainless steel (304, 316, 317, 321, 310 series containing 10–26% chromium) is arc welded, the high-temperature welding arc oxidizes Cr(III) in the base metal to Cr(VI) fume. SMAW, FCAW, GMAW, GTAW, and plasma cutting on stainless steel all generate Cr(VI) — concentrations in the breathing zone frequently exceed the OSHA PEL (5 µg/m³) without LEV. Chrome-moly (CrMo) alloy welding also generates Cr(VI).
Chrome Electroplating — Hexavalent Chrome Bath
Hard chrome and decorative chrome plating uses chromic acid (CrO₃) dissolved in water — a concentrated Cr(VI) solution. During electroplating, electrical current generates a fine chromic acid mist from the bath surface. Without fume suppressants or local exhaust ventilation at the bath rim, operators are directly exposed to Cr(VI) mist at concentrations typically well above the OSHA PEL. Chrome plating requires intensive hexavalent chromium testing.
Chromate Primer & Coating Disturbance
Zinc chromate, strontium chromate, and barium chromate pigments are used in corrosion-inhibiting primers on bridges, aircraft, marine vessels, industrial equipment, and railcars. Abrasive blasting, grinding, sanding, or mechanical disturbance of these coatings releases Cr(VI)-containing dust. Coating identification (bulk chip analysis) is required before disturbance — disturbing chromate primer without Cr(VI) controls in place has led to major OSHA citations.
Aerospace & Defense Coating Manufacturing
Aerospace manufacturing, military equipment maintenance, and aviation MRO facilities use chromate conversion coatings (chromic acid anodizing, Alodine, Iridite) and chromate primer extensively. Spray application of Cr(VI)-containing primers generates respirable chromate aerosol in the breathing zone of paint booth operators. The aerospace industry relies heavily on regular hexavalent chromium testing for regulatory compliance.
Chromate Pigment Manufacturing
Production of lead chromate (chrome yellow), zinc chromate, and other chromate pigments for industrial paints involves handling concentrated Cr(VI) compounds in powder and slurry form. Dust generation during charging, blending, drying, and packaging creates high-concentration Cr(VI) aerosol. Historically, chromate pigment workers have some of the highest documented occupational lung cancer rates associated with Cr(VI) exposure.
Cement Manufacturing & Portland Cement Use
Portland cement contains water-soluble Cr(VI) — predominantly from chromite ore in raw materials and from chrome-containing refractories in kiln linings. Workers handling cement (concrete finishing, masonry, cement manufacturing) are exposed to soluble Cr(VI) via both inhalation and dermal contact. Cement Cr(VI) is associated with occupational contact dermatitis ("cement eczema") and sensitization in addition to inhalation risk.
Hexavalent Chromium Testing for Surfaces — OSHA 1910.1026 Housekeeping Compliance
OSHA 1910.1026(j) requires housekeeping practices that minimize Cr(VI) surface contamination. Wipe sampling quantifies Cr(VI) surface loading on work surfaces, equipment, and hygiene areas — providing defensible documentation that housekeeping controls are effective.
Cr(VI) Wipe Sampling — NIOSH 9102
Surface wipe sampling for Cr(VI) uses pre-moistened wipe cloths (deionized water or alkaline buffer) collected from defined surface areas (100 cm²). Wipes are extracted in phosphate buffer and analyzed by IC (same instrument as NIOSH 7605) for Cr(VI) specifically. Results in µg/100 cm² or µg/ft².
- Work surface and bench top sampling — quantify Cr(VI) dust deposition from welding or grinding operations
- Hygiene area sampling — cafeteria tables, locker room surfaces, change room floors — critical for preventing ingestion exposure
- Equipment surface contamination — tool handles, valve controls, shared equipment in Cr(VI) work areas
- Pre/post-housekeeping comparison — validate that vacuum + wet-wipe protocols achieve acceptable surface levels
- Post-renovation clearance — verify Cr(VI) surface contamination below hazard levels before re-occupancy
Cr(VI) Housekeeping Reference Levels
| Surface / Location | OSHA Requirement | Guidance Level |
|---|---|---|
| Work surfaces (bench, table) | As free as practicable | OSHA 1910.1026(j) |
| Eating / break area surfaces | Prohibit Cr(VI) — surfaces must be clean | No eating in Cr(VI) areas |
| Change room / locker surfaces | No contamination | OSHA 1910.1026(i) |
| Floors — general work area | Vacuum + wet-wipe; NO dry sweeping | 1910.1026(j)(1) |
| Ventilation duct surfaces | Periodic cleaning required | 1910.1026(j)(2) |
* OSHA 1910.1026 does not establish numeric surface clearance limits — requirements are qualitative ("as free as practicable"). Wipe sampling provides the quantitative baseline and trending data to demonstrate compliance and continuous improvement.
Turnaround Times & Sampling Kits — Refrigerated Chain of Custody
Hexavalent Chromium Testing Kit — Provided Free
- Na₂CO₃ / NaOH-impregnated 5 µm PVC filters (37mm, 3-piece cassette) — NIOSH 7605
- Calibrated personal sampling pumps, 1–4 L/min (loaner) with post-calibration check sheet
- Ice packs and insulated shipping bag for refrigerated return COC
- Pre-moistened Cr(VI) wipe cloths + collection templates (100 cm²)
- Sample containers for bulk coating chips with pre-tare mass
- Chain-of-custody forms — includes temperature log and refrigeration confirmation section
- AGT Labs return shipping label (overnight configured)
Hexavalent Chromium Testing — From Filter to Certified Compliance Report
Identify Cr(VI) Operations
Stainless steel welding, chrome plating, chromate coating disturbance, or cement work? Confirm Cr(VI) is the target — not total chromium. Request NIOSH 7605 Na₂CO₃ filter kit from AGT Labs.
Deploy Na₂CO₃ Filter
Clip Na₂CO₃-impregnated PVC cassette to collar within 25 cm of nose. Set pump to 1–4 L/min. Record start time, task, process, ventilation status. Full-shift and STEL samples as required.
Seal & Refrigerate
Upon sampling completion, seal filter cassette caps immediately. Place in evidence bag. Refrigerate at 4°C within 1 hour of collection. Arrange overnight shipping on ice packs — do not ship ambient.
IC or UV-Vis Analysis
Phosphate buffer extraction preserves Cr(VI) speciation. IC separation quantifies chromate ion specifically. UV-Vis DPC colorimetry as alternative/confirmation. All in-house at AGT Labs Houston.
Compliance Report Delivered
Results in µg/m³ vs. OSHA AL (2.5), OSHA PEL (5), NIOSH REL (0.2) — all three limits on every report. Compliance determination, OSHA 1910.1026 program trigger assessment. AIHA LAP number on report.
Who Relies on AGT Labs for Hexavalent Chromium Testing
Petrochemical Construction & Stainless Steel Fabrication
Houston's Gulf Coast petrochemical complex — refineries, chemical plants, LNG facilities — uses extensive stainless steel piping, vessels, and heat exchangers requiring continuous welding and maintenance. Stainless steel pipe welders are among the highest-risk occupations for Cr(VI) fume exposure. AGT Labs provides project-based and annual compliance monitoring programs for plant turnarounds, new construction, and maintenance work.
Metal Finishing & Hard Chrome Plating
Hard chrome electroplating for industrial tooling, hydraulic cylinders, and automotive components uses concentrated chromic acid (CrO₃) baths — the highest-concentration soluble Cr(VI) exposure in industry. OSHA 1910.1026 compliance requires continuous exposure monitoring, fume suppressant verification, LEV performance testing, and medical surveillance for all plating operators. AGT Labs provides full monitoring packages including air, wipe, and bath chemistry analysis coordination.
Aerospace, Defense & Aviation MRO
Chromate conversion coatings (Alodine, chromic acid anodizing), zinc chromate primers, and strontium chromate topcoats are extensively used in military aircraft, commercial aviation, and defense equipment. Spray painters, coating applicators, and maintenance technicians performing sanding or stripping of chromate coatings require Cr(VI) monitoring. AGT Labs supports Texas-based aerospace manufacturers and aviation MRO facilities with OSHA 1910.1026 compliance monitoring programs.
Bridge & Infrastructure Coating Contractors
Texas DOT bridge repainting and industrial structure painting projects frequently encounter chromate-based corrosion inhibiting primers (zinc chromate) on older steel structures. Abrasive blasting of chromate primer releases Cr(VI) dust at high concentrations. Contractors must identify coating Cr(VI) content before work begins (bulk chip analysis) and conduct NIOSH 7605 air monitoring throughout abrasive blast operations. AGT Labs provides both bulk identification and air monitoring from a single AIHA LAP lab.
Shipbuilding & Marine Maintenance
Commercial and naval vessels use chromate primers extensively for corrosion protection in marine environments. Enclosed shipyard compartments and ship tanks create high-concentration Cr(VI) exposure during abrasive blasting, power tool cleaning, and recoating operations. Confined space entry in Cr(VI)-contaminated compartments requires both Cr(VI) and oxygen-deficiency monitoring. AGT Labs coordinates multi-hazard monitoring packages for shipyard safety programs.
IH Consultants & Industrial Hygiene Programs
Multi-client Cr(VI) monitoring programs across welding, plating, and coating industries. AGT Labs provides Na₂CO₃ filter kits with pre-configured overnight return shipping on ice, NIOSH 7605 IC analysis, and compliance reports against OSHA action level, PEL, and NIOSH REL — all three limits on every report. AIHA LAP accreditation number and clear compliance determination on every result. Refrigeration confirmation noted in report chain of custody.
Hexavalent Chromium Testing — FAQ
What is the OSHA PEL for hexavalent chromium?
Why can't NIOSH 7300 be used for hexavalent chromium compliance?
Why must hexavalent chromium samples be refrigerated?
Does stainless steel welding generate Cr(VI)?
What media is used for Cr(VI) air sampling?
What is the OSHA medical surveillance requirement for Cr(VI)?
What are chromate primers and how are they identified?
Can Cr(VI) and total chromium be tested from the same filter?
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ISO/IEC 17025 · AIHA LAP · NIOSH 7605 IC · Refrigerated COC Kits · 3-Limit Compliance Reporting · Houston TX
