Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs)

CAS Number: N/A
Volatile organic compounds (VOCs) are a broad class of carbon-based chemicals that readily evaporate at room temperature. They are emitted from paints, adhesives, solvents, cleaning products, fuels, printing inks, pesticides, and building materials. In occupational settings, VOC exposure is common in painting, printing, automotive repair, dry cleaning, laboratory work, and chemical manufacturing. Health effects vary widely by compound and include eye and respiratory irritation, headaches, dizziness, liver and kidney damage, and carcinogenicity (for specific VOCs such as benzene and formaldehyde). Industrial hygienists use photoionization detectors (PIDs) for real-time screening and passive or active sorbent tubes for substance-specific analysis.

VOC monitoring detects volatile organic compounds in manufacturing facilities, paint operations, remediation projects, and indoor air quality investigations using photoionization detection (PID) technology. Rent handheld and personal PID monitors from RAECO Rents for real-time field screening across a wide range of compounds. RAECO Rents gas monitors are bump tested or span calibrated on the day of shipment. Our team can help confirm the right monitor, alarms, and setup for the job, with fast turnaround and phone support so you can get reliable field readings quickly.

Regulatory Exposure Limits

Updated on March 09, 2026

OSHA PEL
TWA: N/A
STEL: N/A
C: N/A
NIOSH REL
TWA: N/A
STEL: N/A
C: N/A
ACGIH TLV
TWA: N/A
STEL: N/A
C: N/A
Frequently Asked Questions
Common questions about
Do I need a PID for VOC screening, or a compound-specific method?
Use a PID when you need fast total-VOC screening and source hunting. Use compound-specific monitoring or lab sampling when your decision hinges on a specific chemical (benzene, formaldehyde, etc.) or when you need compliance-grade documentation for a regulated substance.
When do I need continuous VOC logging?
Continuous VOC logging is worth it when you're tracking exposure patterns over a shift, investigating intermittent sources (process releases, solvent use cycles), or need a time-stamped record for a report. If you're just doing a quick source identification or odor investigation, a spot check with a PID is usually sufficient.
Do I need a standard ppm PID, a ppb PID, or lab sampling for VOCs?
Use a standard ppm-range PID for general VOC screening, source identification, and checking whether concentrations are in a range worth further investigation. Use a ppb-range PID when you need to detect very low VOC concentrations (ambient air quality, odor investigations at low levels, sensitive occupant complaints). Use lab sampling (SUMMA canisters, DNPH cartridges, sorbent tubes) when you need to identify specific compounds, compare to regulatory limits with defensible data, or when concentrations are below the detection limit of even a ppb PID.
What's the most common mistake with PID VOC results?
Reporting PID readings as exact concentrations of a named chemical without noting calibration gas and limitations. Clear notes on instrument setup and assumptions keep results from being misused.
What should I know before renting a VOC meter?
Confirm whether you need personal monitoring or area screening, the expected range (ppm vs. ppb sensitivity), whether you need logging and report export, and what compounds are likely present. Those inputs determine whether you need a wide-range PID, a high-sensitivity PID, or a different sensor.
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