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A confined space entry requires continuous atmospheric monitoring. What is the minimum acceptable oxygen level for safe entry?

Correct Answer

B) 19.5%

OSHA requires that oxygen levels be maintained between 19.5% and 23.5% for safe confined space entry. Below 19.5% creates an oxygen-deficient atmosphere that can be immediately dangerous to life and health.

Answer Options
A
16%
B
19.5%
C
21%
D
23.5%

Why This Is the Correct Answer

OSHA Standard 29 CFR 1910.146 specifically mandates that oxygen levels must be maintained between 19.5% and 23.5% for safe confined space entry. The 19.5% minimum threshold is critical because oxygen levels below this create an oxygen-deficient atmosphere that poses immediate danger to workers. This standard ensures workers have adequate oxygen for normal respiration and prevents hypoxia-related incidents. Continuous atmospheric monitoring is required to verify these levels are maintained throughout the work period.

Why the Other Options Are Wrong

Option A: 16%

16% oxygen is dangerously low and creates an oxygen-deficient atmosphere that can cause immediate health hazards including loss of consciousness, impaired judgment, and potentially fatal hypoxia.

Option C: 21%

While 21% represents normal atmospheric oxygen levels, OSHA sets the minimum threshold at 19.5% to account for potential fluctuations and provide a safety margin during confined space work.

Option D: 23.5%

23.5% represents the upper limit of OSHA's acceptable range, not the minimum requirement, and exceeding this level can create oxygen-enriched conditions that increase fire and explosion risks.

Memory Technique

Remember '19.5 to stay alive' - this helps recall that 19.5% is the minimum oxygen level needed to prevent life-threatening oxygen deficiency in confined spaces.

Reference Hint

OSHA 29 CFR 1910.146 - Permit-Required Confined Spaces, or safety chapter covering atmospheric hazards and monitoring requirements

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