In the transition toward more efficient industrial processing, the choice between Infrared (IR) Drying and Ultraviolet (UV) LED Curing often hinges on safety profiles. While both systems eliminate many of the volatile organic compounds (VOCs) found in traditional solvent drying, they present distinct physical and photo-biological hazards which the operators must be protected from.
1. Physical Hazards: Fire and Thermal Safety
The most significant operational difference lies in how these systems manage heat.
Infrared (IR) Drying
IR drying relies on the evaporation of water or solvents. Because IR emitters operate in the 250°C to 600°C range, they pose a high risk of igniting combustible substrates (like paper or thin films) if the production line stops.
- Key Requirement: Systems must incorporate automatic interlocks and air-knife cooling to prevent “hot spots” during unplanned stops.
- DSEAR Compliance: If solvents are present, the system must comply with the Dangerous Substances and Explosive Atmospheres Regulations (DSEAR) to mitigate explosion risks from evaporated vapours.
UV LED Curing
Unlike traditional mercury vapour lamps (which reach 800°C+), UV LEDs are “cool” light sources. They emit negligible IR energy, meaning the substrate remains near room temperature.
- Safety Advantage: The risk of substrate ignition is lower.
- Requirement: While the light itself does not contain IR wavelengths it is still a concentrated, intensive radiative hazard which itself can be a fire risk to combustible substrates or products that absorb the UV energy.
2. Photo-biological Hazards: Eye and Skin Protection
Radiation safety is governed by the wavelength and the intensity (irradiance) of the light source.
| Feature | IR Drying Systems | UV LED Curing Systems |
| Primary Wavelength | 700 nm – 15 micron (Thermal) | 365 nm – 405 nm (UVA) |
| Primary Biological Risk | Corneal/Retinal thermal burns | Photokeratitis & DNA damage |
| Invisible Hazard | High (Thermal IR is invisible) | High (UVA is mostly invisible) |
| Ventilation Needs | High (to remove vapours/heat) | Low (no ozone production) |
Occupational health & workplace safety
- ACGIH Threshold: The Threshold Limit Value (TLV) for UVA exposure (315–400 nm) is generally set at 1mW⋅m−2 for an 8-hour period.
- Artificial Optical Radiation Directive (2006/25/EC)
- Engineering Controls: Both systems require light shielding (opaque guarding) worker exposure below set limits, training, PPE and signage.
3. Global Standards for Safety and Design
Designers and safety officers must adhere to a specific hierarchy of international standards to ensure machine safety.
General Machinery Safety
- ISO 12100: General principles for design and risk assessment.
- IEC 60204-1: Safety of machinery – Electrical equipment of machines.
- EN ISO 13849-1 / IEC 62061: Functional safety of control systems
Radiation-Specific Standards
- EN 12198-1: This is the primary standard for non-ionising radiation emitted by machinery. It requires manufacturers to categorise machines into “Radiation Categories” (0, 1, or 2) based on emission levels.
- ISO 15858 – UV-C devices: permissible human exposure: Human safety requirements for devices other than water treatment.
- ACGIH / ICNIRP: exposure limit guidelines
- IEC 62471: The standard for photo-biological safety. It evaluates the risk to the eye and skin from all light sources, including LED’s and IR emitters.
Process-Specific Standards
- EN 1539: Specifically governs dryers and ovens where flammable substances are released, critical for IR drying installations.
Technical Summary
While IR systems demand rigorous fire suppression and ventilation to manage high-temperature thermal loads and volatile vapours, UV LED systems shift the safety focus more toward photo-biological shielding. UV LED is objectively safer regarding fire risk and environmental impact (zero ozone), but it requires stricter controls against invisible light exposure.
