BS ISO 12219-4:2013
Interior air of road vehicles Method for the determination of the emissions of volatile organic compounds from vehicle interior parts and materials. Small chamber method
Standard number: | BS ISO 12219-4:2013 |
Pages: | 28 |
Released: | 2013-04-30 |
ISBN: | 978 0 580 72826 6 |
Status: | Standard |
BS ISO 12219-4:2013
This standard BS ISO 12219-4:2013 Interior air of road vehicles is classified in these ICS categories:
- 43.020 Road vehicles in general
- 13.040.20 Ambient atmospheres
This part of ISO 12219 specifies a qualitative and quantitative analytical method for vapour-phase organic compounds (volatile and some semi-volatile) released from car trim materials under simulated real use conditions using small emission test chambers (small chamber). Small chambers are intended to provide a transfer function to vehicle level emissions. This method is intended for evaluating new car interior trim components but can, in principle, be applied to used car components.
Target compounds include VOCs (conventionally defined as organic compounds in the volatility range n-hexane to n-hexadecane) and volatile carbonyl compounds such as formaldehyde. The specified analytical procedure for VOCs is ISO 16000-6 and for formaldehyde and some other light carbonyl compounds is ISO 16000-3.
NOTE Compounds more volatile than n-hexane and less volatile than n-hexadecane can also be analysed (see ISO 16000-6:2011, Annex D, and ISO 16017-1[8] for more information).
This part of ISO 12219 is complementary to ASTM D5116[1] and VDA 276,[2] and provides third party test laboratories and manufacturing industry with an approach for:
identifying the effect of real use conditions on specific VOC emissions data;
comparing emissions from various assemblies with regards to specific VOC emissions;
evaluating and sorting specific assemblies regarding specific VOC emissions data;
providing specific VOC emissions data to develop and verify a correlation between material level methods and the vehicle level method;
evaluating prototype, “low-emission” assemblies during development.