The IEC Standard 825-1 is the pre-eminent international laser safety standard. Although initially intended only as a manufacturer’s system-safety, product performance standard, it has grown as well in acceptance as an authoritative source for information on safe use of lasers. Emphasis in revisions of this standard has, however, centered on manufacturer’s requirements, the definition of laser hazard classes, and measurement procedures for classification. The initial standard, IEC 825 was first published in 1984 and drew heavily on the American National Standard ANSI Z-136.1 and the US Federal Performance Standard for Laser Products (21CFR1040). Although the IEC standard has evolved, the basic philosophy and most requirements remain unchanged. The only significant changes have resulted from new scientific data, for clarification or the need to change a clearly needless requirement which has plagued either manufacturers or users. The most significant change that took place with the second edition of the standard (i.e., IEC 825-1) has been to include LEDs as if they were lasers. This fundamental change was made at the final meeting prior to voting on the new edition. Consequently, an adequate review of the impact upon applications, underlying assumptions in the MPEs and AELs, and classification measurement had not been fully studied. As a result, the major activity of IEC TC-76 during the last three meetings has been in attempting to correct problems arising from the inclusion of LEDs in the same standard. Today, IEC TC-76 has been working to develop nested sub-classes to account for the wide range of risk presented by LEDs and lasers. This has led to proposals for Classes 1A and 1B to provide a class based upon a worst-case risk analysis (1A) and a “reasonably foreseeable” definition (1B). Other sub-classes have been proposed as well.

1.
International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC)
(
1993
),
International Standard IEC 8925-1, “Safety of Laser Products—Part 1: Equipment Classification, Requirements and User’s Guide
,”
Geneva
:
IEC
[available in the USA from American National Standards Institute (ANSI), NY].
2.
American Conference of Governmental Industrial Hygienists (ACGIH)
(
1996
),
TLV’s, Threshold Limit Values and Biological Exposure Indices for 1996
,
American Conference of Governmental Industrial Hygienists
,
Cincinnati, OH
.
3.
ACGIH
(
1992
),
Documentation for the Threshold Limit Values
, 4th Edn.,
American Conference of Governmental Industrial Hygienists
,
Cincinnati, OH
.
4.
Duchene
A.S.
,
Lakey
,
J.R.
A., and
Repacholi
,
M.H.
(Eds.) (
1991
),
IRPA Guidelines on Protection Against Non-Ionizing Radiation
,
New York
,
MacMillan
.
5.
International Commission on Non-Ionizing Radiation Protection (ICNIRP)
(
1996
)
Guidelines on Limits for Laser Radiation of Wavelengths between 180 nm and 1,000 μm
,
Health Phys
,
71
(
5
):
804
819
. [This reference is the rationale document for the laser MPEs, upon which the more recent laser AELs are based.]
6.
World Health Organization [WHO]
, (
1982
),
Environmental Health Criteria No. 23, Lasers and Optical Radiation
, joint publication of the
United Nations Environmental Program, the International Radiation Protection Association and the World Health Organization
,
Geneva
7.
Sliney
,
D.H.
, (
1996
).
Laser Effects on Vision and Ocular Exposure Limits
,
Appl Occup Environ Hyg
11
(
4
)
313
319
.
8.
Lund
D. J
,
P.R.
Edsall
,
D. R.
Fuller
, and
S.W.
Hoxie
, (
1996
)
Ocular Hazards of Tunable Continuous-Wave Near-Infrared Laser Sources
,
SPIE Proc
.
2674
:
53
61
.
9.
Courant
,
D.
,
Court
,
L.
,
Abadie
,
B
,
Brouillet
,
V
(
1989
)
Retinal damage thresholds from single-pulse exposures in the visible spectrum
,
Health Phys.
,
56
(
5
):
637
642
.
10.
Courant
,
D.
,
Court
L
,
Sliney
DH
(
1989
) Spot size dependence of laser retinal dosimetry. In (
Mueller
JG
and
Sliney
DH
, eds.),
Dosimetry of laser radiation in medicine and biology
, SPIE Institute Series,
Bellingham, WA
,
SPIE Press
, Vol.
IS5
:
156
165
.
11.
Sliney
,
DH
, and
Wolbarsht
,
ML
(
1980
)
Safety with Lasers and Other Optical Sources
,
Plenum Publishing
,
New York
. See particularly, Chapters 2,3 and 7.
12.
Ham
,
W. T.
, Jr.
(
1989
) The photopathology and nature of the blue-light and near-UV retinal lesion produced by lasers and other optical sources (
M. L.
Wolbarsht
, ed.)
Laser Applications in Medicine and Biology
,
New York
:
Plenum Publishing Corp
.
13.
Sliney
,
DH
(Editor) (
1995
)
Selected Papers on Laser Safety, SPIE Milestone Series
, Volume MS
117
,
SPIE Optical Engineering Press
,
Bellingham, WA
.
14.
Velichovsky
,
B
,
Pomplun
M
, and
Rieser
J
(
1996
)
Attention and communication: eye-movement-based research paradigms
, in (
WH
Zangemeister
,
HS
Stiehl
and
C
Freska
, Eds.)
Visual Attention and Cognition
,
Amsterdam, North Holland-Elsevier
, pp
125
154
.
15.
Wyszecki
,
G
and
W.S.
Stiles
(
1982
)
Color Science: Concerpts and Methods, Quantitative Data and Formulae
(2nd Edn.),
New York
,
Wiley
.
16.
International Commission on Non-Ionizing Radiation Protection (ICNIRP)
,
1997
,
Guidelines on Limits of Exposure for Broad-band Incoherent Optical Radiation (0.38 to 3 μm)
,
Health Phys
,
73
: in press.
17.
Gibbons
WD
and
Allen
RG
(
1975
)
Evaluation of Retinal Damage Produced by Long-Term Exposure to Laser Radiation
, Report SAM-TR-75-11,
US Air Force School of Aerospace Medicine
,
Brooks Air Force Base, TX
.
18.
Ham
,
WT
, et al (
1984
)
Ocular effects of GaAs lasers and near infrared radiation
,
Applied Optics
,
23
(
13
):
2181
2186
.
19.
Lund
DJ
,
Stuck
,
BJ
and
Beatrice
,
ES
(
1981
)
Biological Resarch in Support of Project Miles
, Report No. 96,
Letterman Army Institute of Research
,
San Francisco
.
20.
Wolbarsht
,
M.L.
and
Sliney
,
D.H.
, 1991, 1992,
Historical Development of the ANSI Laser Safety Standard
,
Journal of Laser Applications
,
3
(
1
):
5
10
(
1991
) and
Wolbarsht
,
M.L.
and
Sliney
,
D.H.
, 1991, 1992,
Historical Development of the ANSI Laser Safety Standard
,
Journal of Laser Applications
,
4
(
3
):
18
21
, (
1992
).
This content is only available via PDF.
You do not currently have access to this content.