Engelbrecht’s research while affiliated with Tshwane University of Technology and other places

What is this page?


This page lists works of an author who doesn't have a ResearchGate profile or hasn't added the works to their profile yet. It is automatically generated from public (personal) data to further our legitimate goal of comprehensive and accurate scientific recordkeeping. If you are this author and want this page removed, please let us know.

Publications (1)


Figure 1. Occupational illnesses reported in the United States.
Figure 2. Occupational illnesses reported in South Africa.
Figure 3. Occupational illnesses reported in the United Kingdom.
Average noise levels per manufacturing industry type.
Hearing conservation and control levels [45].

+5

Noise Sources and Control, and Exposure Groups in Chemical Manufacturing Plants
  • Article
  • Full-text available

August 2019

·

7,557 Reads

·

9 Citations

·

Harmse

·

Engelbrecht

The chemical manufacturing industry employs sophisticated mechanical equipment to process feedstock such as natural gas by transforming it to usable raw material in downstream sectors. Workers employed at these facilities are exposed to inherent occupational health hazards, including occupational noise. An online and grey literature search on ScienceDirect, Oxford Journals online, PubMed, Medline, Jstor and regulatory bodies using specific keywords on noise emission sources in the manufacturing sector was conducted. This review focuses on noise sources and their control in chemical manufacturing plants along with the receptors of the emitted noise, providing hearing conservation programme stakeholders valuable information for better programme management. Literature confirms that chemical manufacturing plants operate noise emitting equipment which exposes job categories such as machine operators, process operators and maintenance personnel amongst others. Prominent noise sources in chemicals manufacturing industries include compressors, pumps, motors, fans, turbines, vents, steam leaks and control valves. Specific industries within the chemical manufacturing sector emit noise levels ranging between 85–115 dBA (A-weighted sound pressure level), which exceed the noise rating limit of 85 dBA used in South Africa and United Kingdom, as well as the 90 dBA permissible exposure level used in the United States, levels above which workplace control is required. Engineering noise control solutions for plant equipment and machinery operated in chemical manufacturing plants are available on the market for implementation.

Download

Citations (1)


... • DP 2.2.1.1 -The distance between the user and the spoken input receiver (m) was decided to span between 5cm (for head-mic or wearable microphone) and 1m (for fixed microphone or voice assistant). The design range of 95cm is based on the assumption that the person is speaking at a comfortable tone, at approximately 60dB [25] and assuming that the average dB within an industrial shopfloor is between 85dB and 115dB [26]. • DP 2.2.2.1 -The keyboard and mouse's input latency (ms) as this has been proven to directly influence the user's performance [27] was set at between 2 and 50ms for a standard keyboard and mouse (design range of 48ms). ...

Reference:

Cognitive Design of Collaborative Human-Robot workstations in Industry 5.0: A Kansei Engineering approach to quantifying emotions in problem decomposition
Noise Sources and Control, and Exposure Groups in Chemical Manufacturing Plants