While small amounts of dust pose little to no threat for anyone, a lack of regular maintenance and routine cleaning can be dangerous for employees as well as products.
As soon as enough dust accumulates, it can:
Dust can pose serious health risks for your factory’s workers. Dust on the floor can cause slipping accidents and regular exposure to dust particles can irritate the skin, eyes, respiratory system, ears, and more.
Even more seriously, if your employees spend at least a few hours in such conditions every day, they are at risk of developing long-term illnesses.
The effects of certain dust particles on some employees may not be known until a few years later. Consider stonemasons: Silicosis is an incurable and often fatal lung disease caused by breathing in dust containing crystalline silica found in manufactured stone. Apprentices and working stonemasons are increasingly difficult to retain as this illness affects the industry. Click here to read more about the implications for the stonemason trade.
If enough dust manages to build up, it will cause performance issues. Your equipment will work less efficiently, and maintenance costs may begin to rise. The attendant downtime will lead to further losses.
If the factory floor gets too dirty, it becomes harder to move materials across your facility. Internal components will also suffer from dust thanks to clogged air filters, damaged machine parts, or shorts to electric parts.
If dust starts building up on higher levels of your factory, your products will be at constant risk.
One specific and potentially deadly effect of dust can be the combustive dust explosion.
After long periods of accumulation, dust can become dangerous. If it comes in contact with an ignition source, it may explode and put the wellbeing of everyone in the facility in danger.
Such cases are not rare; and in recent years they are becoming even more common. OSHA often improves its standards by requiring good housekeeping habits from factories.
There are ways to avoid these potentially serious problems in your warehouse:
Preventing dust from entering your site from outside is the first obvious task to undertake. If you are able to minimise the amount of dust coming into the warehouse, it will be one less headache for you in the long run.
Many strategies used to decrease the dust entering site can also help with maintaining internal warehouse temperatures with temperature control doors, such as airlock zones and automated door systems with the use of products such as Movidor High Speed Rapid Roller Doors and Insulated and automated dock doors and the like.
Think of dust inspections and cleaning as being part of your normal maintenance routine. While water will do fine for most surfaces, you may need special detergents for equipment and electronics.
Consider a weekly scheduled mechanical clean and oil, possibly at the end of the working week, to keep equipment clean, oiled and ready for the next week of work. That way you can be sure your equipment is not going to be left dirty until a major failure occurs.
Ventilation control systems are a solution which use extractor fans to create air flows inside your facility; pulling dust particles up through ducts where there is a dust collection bag at the other end of the ducts.
You can turn off the ventilation system at any time and safely remove and dispose of the collected dust.
The less unnecessary traffic there is in your warehouse, the better. Friction between tires and the floor’s surface can result in the creation of dust. Speed will accelerate this process and fast-moving objects will stir up more dust.
Analyzing the traffic flow within your warehouse space often helps to reduce the amount of distance which goods need to travel to get from one area to another.
For example, goods which are ordered frequently should be placed closer to the dispatch area than those which are rarely ordered. This also means that some areas of your site can be segregated if required. For example, the food processing area can be kept separate from the dispatch area where there is a high traffic volume and vehicle fumes; neither of which should be mixed together with food processing or fresh produce.
Keeping everything orderly and storing smaller materials inside containers will help in the fight against dust. It is an efficient solution and easier to go about cleaning the top of a container than individual goods stacked on a shelf.
A neat solution to containing dust and preventing it from spreading is the use of PVC Stripdoors and partitioning solutions. A high speed rapid roller door can also be used to control entry to other areas of the facility, with easy access when needed. If one area is particularly prone to attracting dust (being near the entrance for example), there may not need to be a reason for the entire site to be open to the elements.
The dust will remain in a controlled environment, so you can quickly and easily remove it later. Such curtain walls will help in securing a healthy working environment with high standards.
For more information about managing dust in your facility, get in touch with the expert Remax team online or call us on 1800 010 221.