Ammonia gas monitoring in an industrial workplace

Gas monitoring

Ammonia Monitoring

Ammonia monitoring measures exposure to ammonia gas around refrigeration plant, food processing and chemical handling, benchmarked against the 25 ppm workplace exposure limit.

Method

EH40 / direct-reading

Sampling

Personal & static

WEL (EH40)

25 ppm (8-hour TWA), 35 ppm STEL

Turnaround

5–10 working days

01

What is ammonia monitoring?

Ammonia gas monitoring measures the airborne concentration of ammonia gas leaking from refrigeration systems, fertiliser and chemical processes that workers may breathe in during normal operations. It quantifies real personal exposure so employers can judge whether existing controls are adequate.

IndustrialAirMonitoring.uk provides independent ammonia monitoring across cold storage and refrigeration, food processing, fertiliser, chemical manufacture sites throughout the UK. Our occupational hygienists deliver defensible exposure data that demonstrates compliance with the Control of Substances Hazardous to Health Regulations 2002 (COSHH) and the workplace exposure limits set out in HSE guidance note EH40.

02

Why ammonia monitoring matters

Under COSHH Regulation 10, employers must monitor exposure to hazardous substances where it is needed to protect health, where a workplace exposure limit could be exceeded, or where control measures need to be verified. Ammonia gas monitoring provides the objective evidence that satisfies this duty.

Uncontrolled exposure to ammonia gas is linked to respiratory and eye irritation, chemical burns and pulmonary damage. Beyond the legal duty, robust monitoring protects your workforce, reduces the risk of enforcement action and civil claims, and gives insurers and clients confidence that exposure is being actively managed.

03

How we carry out ammonia monitoring

We measure exposure using direct-reading electrochemical detection with data logging, plus sorbent sampling for time-weighted limits, following the recognised EH40 / direct-reading methodology. Personal samplers are worn in the breathing zone for a representative full shift to derive an 8-hour time-weighted average, while static (background) samples help map contaminant sources across the workplace.

Samples are analysed by an accredited laboratory and the results compared with the relevant occupational exposure limit. Where short-term peaks are a concern we add 15-minute short-term exposure limit (STEL) sampling, so both the chronic and acute risk picture is captured.

04

Standards, limits and reporting

The current workplace exposure limit for ammonia gas is 25 ppm (8-hour TWA), 35 ppm STEL (EH40/2005, as amended). We assess compliance using the BS EN 689 statistical decision framework, which accounts for exposure variability rather than relying on a single result.

Your report sets out the measured concentrations, the compliance position, the adequacy of existing controls such as local exhaust ventilation, and a recommended re-monitoring interval. It is written to be understood by managers and to satisfy HSE inspectors, auditors and insurers.

05

Our ammonia monitoring process

Our ammonia monitoring programmes follow a structured, four-stage workflow so the results stand up to scrutiny. Request monitoring or book a site assessment to begin.

  1. 1Scoping & site survey. We review your processes, COSHH assessments and previous ammonia monitoring data, then plan a representative sampling strategy using BS EN 689 similar exposure groups.
  2. 2On-site sampling. Qualified occupational hygienists carry out calibrated breathing-zone and static measurements across a representative shift, with full chain-of-custody documentation.
  3. 3Accredited analysis. Samples are analysed using the relevant MDHS / ISO laboratory method and the results are compared against the applicable workplace exposure limit.
  4. 4Reporting & recommendations. You receive a clear exposure report with compliance status, control recommendations and a re-monitoring interval — defensible evidence for HSE, insurers and auditors.
06

Frequently asked questions

What is the ammonia exposure limit?

Ammonia has an 8-hour TWA workplace exposure limit of 25 ppm and a 15-minute STEL of 35 ppm.

Where is ammonia monitoring required?

Industrial refrigeration (cold stores, food plants), fertiliser production and chemical processes using ammonia.

Can ammonia explode?

Ammonia is flammable at high concentrations; monitoring addresses both toxic exposure and, where relevant, flammability risk.

Next step

Need ammonia monitoring for your site?

Request monitoring