Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Health Sciences Department of Microbiology and Immunology

Biological Safety Cabinets

Page Contents (Page 2 of 2)

Include: General information| Laminar Flow Hoods (Crossflow Cabinet) | Downflow Cabinet (Class I Biosafety Cabinet) | Downflow Cabinet (Class II Biosafety Cabinet) | Downflow Cabinet (Class III Biosafety Cabinet)
Page 1 ~ Includes: Working with biological hazards | Classification of Microorganisms by Risk Group

General Information

The biological safety cabinet is the principal device used to provide containment of infectious aerosols generated by many procedures such as:

The type of cabinet required depends on the degree of hazard. Hazards can be classified as follows:

  1. NO OR MINIMAL HAZARD
    No or minimal danger to humans, animals or plants.
    Class I or class II cabinet.
  2. ORDINARY OR POTENTIAL HAZARD
    Work with agents which produce disease in humans, animals or plants and which can be contained by normal microbiological techniques.
    Class I or class II cabinet.
  3. SPECIAL HAZARD
    Work with agents which are highly infectious to humans, animals or plants.
    Class II cabinet.
  4. EXTREME HAZARD
    Work with agents extremely dangerous to humans, animals or plants or which cause serious epidemic disease.
    Class III cabinet or flexible film isolator
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Laminar Flow Hoods
Crossflow Cabinet

WARNING. Laminar flow cabinets (downflow or crossflow) are designed for product protection only and must never be used for work with infectious material. Their use should be limited to the preparation of sterile media, the assembly of sterile components into complete units (eg. membrane filters) or other similar operations.

Downflow Cabinet
Class I Biosafety Cabinet

This cabinet is designed for personnel and environment protection.

A protective barrier between the operator and the potential hazard is provided by creating a uniform inflow of air across the entire work opening of sufficient velocity to prevent egress of material from the cabinet work zone to the laboratory environment. The airflow passes from the work zone through a primary filter to remove coarse particulate material in order to protect and prolong the life of the HEPA (High Efficiency Particulate Air) filter. It then passes through the blower and is filtered free (99.99%) or particulate and biological matter before being returned to the laboratory environment as exhaust air.

MARKING: Each cabinet shall be prominently, legibly and indelibly marked with the following:

Further information is available.

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Downflow Cabinet
Class II Biosafety Cabinet

The class II biosafety cabinet provides and maintains a work zone free of airborne particulate and biological contamination and also provides a protective barrier between the product and the operator. This cabinet performs two vital functions at the same time and can be viewed as a combination of a laminar flow cabinet and a class I biosafety cabinet.

This clean workzone is achieved by HEPA filtered air moving in a downward laminar flow at a constant and uniform velocity. 70-75% of this air is re circulated whilst 25-30% is exhausted into the laboratory environment. An air barrier between the work zone and the environment is created across the full width of the opening by induction or air into the sump through the forward section of the grille.

This cabinet has two distinct air movements. They require blending at velocities that do no interfere with each other. The barrier air blends with the re circulated laminar flow air and is then HEPA filtered. There are several causes of disruption to performance affecting class II cabinets in particular:

Each cabinet shall be prominently, legibly and indelibly marked with the following:

Further information is available.

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Downflow Cabinet
Class III Biosafety Cabinet

This is totally enclosed and maintained at negative pressure. The air is HEPA filtered before entering and after leaving the cabinet. Access to the work area is through gloves, therefore this cabinet provides a physical barrier between its contents and the laboratory environment. A flexible film isolator can also be used as an alternative to a class III biosafety cabinet. Operator sensitivity is decreased by the use of gloves and they are usually used for extremely hazardous material only.

Further information is available.

 

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