OH Consultant
Australia Manufacturing/Brisbane

Solvent Exposure MonitoringBrisbane

Brisbane's manufacturing sector spans spray painting, surface coating, printing, adhesive application, and parts cleaning across industrial areas in Acacia Ridge, Eagle Farm, Hemmant, Wacol, and Richlands. The incoming WEL framework introduces the OTO (ototoxicity) notation for solvents including toluene, xylene, and styrene — meaning that workers exposed to both solvents and noise must now have their exposures assessed together rather than independently.

5 Key Hazards Monitored

Brisbane Local Context

South East Queensland's manufacturing base includes automotive components, marine manufacturing, furniture and joinery, and general metal fabrication — all using solvents in spray painting, degreasing, adhesive application, and cleaning processes. Brisbane's industrial areas in the southern corridor (Acacia Ridge, Rocklea, Salisbury) and northern corridor (Eagle Farm, Hemmant, Pinkenba) contain hundreds of manufacturing operations where multiple solvents are used simultaneously, potentially requiring additive mixture calculations. The OTO notation means that spray painters exposed to both toluene-based paints and noise from compressors and extraction fans need a combined assessment.

Workplace Health and Safety Queensland (WHSQ) Enforcement

Work Health and Safety Act 2011 (Qld), WHS Regulation 2011 (Qld)

Category 1: up to $3,011,166 (body corporate)

Insurance for WHS penalties prohibited from September 2025

OWHSP can prosecute within 2 years of offence coming to notice

Major Project Types in Brisbane

Spray painting operations (automotive, marine, industrial coatings)
Parts degreasing and cleaning operations
Adhesive application in furniture and joinery
Printing operations (screen printing, digital printing)

Key Hazards

Primary exposure hazards requiring monitoring in Brisbane.

Spray painting operations

chemical

Automotive refinishing, industrial coating, and furniture lacquering generate high concentrations of solvent vapours in the breathing zone. Spray application creates fine aerosols that increase both inhalation and dermal absorption. Downdraft spray booths require periodic air monitoring to confirm capture velocity and verify that operator exposure remains below the WES for each solvent in the coating system.

Degreasing and parts cleaning

chemical

Vapour degreasing with chlorinated solvents and manual parts cleaning with petroleum-based solvents generate sustained vapour concentrations at the task location. Open-top degreasers and manual wiping operations produce peak exposures that must be assessed against STEL values. Solvent substitution programmes require baseline and post-change monitoring to verify exposure reduction.

Adhesive application

chemical

Contact adhesives, laminating adhesives, and structural bonding agents contain volatile solvents including toluene, MEK, acetone, and hexane. Large surface area application in enclosed production areas generates vapour concentrations that accumulate over the shift. n-Hexane requires specific monitoring due to its peripheral neuropathy hazard at relatively low concentrations (WES 20 ppm TWA).

Additive mixture exposure

chemical

Manufacturing environments commonly involve simultaneous exposure to three or more solvents from the same coating system or from adjacent processes. The additive mixture formula (sum of C/WES ratios) must be applied when solvents have the same target organ effect. A combined ratio exceeding 1.0 indicates the WES has been exceeded even though no individual solvent exceeds its own limit.

Coating line emissions

chemical

Continuous coating lines for metal, plastic, and wood products generate sustained low-level solvent emissions from drying ovens, curing tunnels, and wet application stations. Workers stationed along the line accumulate exposure over the full shift. Thermal decomposition products from oven-cured coatings may introduce additional hazards requiring characterisation.

Common Analytes

Substances typically included in occupational hygiene sampling proposals for this sub-category.

AnalyteCASRelevance
Toluene108-88-3WES 50 ppm TWA, 150 ppm STEL. Common in paints, lacquers, adhesives, and thinners. CNS depressant and reproductive toxin.
Xylene (mixed isomers)1330-20-7WES 80 ppm TWA, 150 ppm STEL. Major component of industrial paints and coatings. CNS depressant, mucous membrane irritant.
Methyl Ethyl Ketone (MEK)78-93-3WES 150 ppm TWA, 300 ppm STEL. Widely used as a solvent in coatings and adhesives and as a cleaning agent in manufacturing.
Acetone67-64-1WES 500 ppm TWA, 1000 ppm STEL. Used in cleaning, degreasing, and as a co-solvent in coating formulations. Low toxicity but high vapour pressure generates elevated concentrations.
Isopropyl Alcohol (IPA)67-63-0WES 200 ppm TWA, 400 ppm STEL. Used in surface preparation, cleaning, and as a carrier solvent in manufacturing processes.
n-Hexane110-54-3WES 20 ppm TWA. Peripheral neuropathy hazard. Present in some adhesives and specialty cleaning solvents. Requires specific monitoring when identified in SDS review.

Typical Worker Groups

Common similar exposure groups (SEGs) assessed for this sub-category.

Spray painters (booth operators)Degreasing and parts cleaning operatorsAdhesive applicators and laminatorsCoating line operatorsPaint mixing room workersQuality inspection staff (downstream of coating)Maintenance workers (solvent-cleaned equipment)

Regulatory Context

Safe Work Australia publishes Workplace Exposure Standards for Airborne Contaminants that include TWA and STEL values for all common industrial solvents. The WHS Regulation requires PCBUs to ensure that worker exposure does not exceed the WES. Where multiple solvents with the same health effect are present simultaneously, the additive mixture formula must be applied in accordance with the Workplace Exposure Standards guidance. Health monitoring is required for workers exposed to certain solvents including toluene and xylene under the WHS Regulation Schedule 14. Air monitoring must be conducted by a competent person using validated sampling and analytical methods. From 1 December 2026, WES values transition to Workplace Exposure Limits (WELs) under the revised national framework.

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