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API Publication 2008, originally published in 1976 and available today as a historical scanned document, addresses the acute toxicity risks associated with carbon monoxide (CO) present in the exhaust of gas turbine driven generators. The primary purpose of this publication was to identify the unique and frequently underestimated hazard posed by gas turbine engines, which are capable of producing significant quantities of CO during startup, shutdown, and low-load operation. At the time of its release, this hazard was distinct from the risks associated with steam turbines or reciprocating engines, making the publication a critical industry advisory for facilities engineers and safety managers responsible for standby and prime power generation equipment.
The scope of the document emphasizes that CO is a colorless, odorless, and highly toxic asphyxiant that can accumulate rapidly in enclosed or semi-enclosed turbine installations. The publication focuses on design considerations required to prevent exposure incidents, specifically regarding proper equipment siting, ventilation, and the risks of exhaust plume re-entrainment into building air intakes.
The core technical contribution of API Publication 2008 is its forensic breakdown of how CO is generated and introduced into the working environment. Gas turbines, particularly poorly tuned units or those operating under transient conditions, can generate CO concentrations in the exhaust stream that are immediately dangerous to life and health (IDLH). The publication breaks down the hazard into distinct operational scenarios:
| CO Concentration (ppm) | Physiological Effect & Regulatory Limit | Relevance to API Publ 2008 Scenarios |
|---|---|---|
| 35 | Maximum allowable workplace exposure (8-hour TWA per OSHA) | Target threshold for safe exhaust dispersion design |
| 200 | Up to 2 hours: Headache, fatigue, reduced mental acuity | Classic result of HVAC intake contamination from nearby exhaust stack |
| 800 | Up to 45 minutes: Convulsions, loss of consciousness, death | Indicator of direct exhaust duct failure inside an enclosed turbine hall |
| 1500 | Immediately Dangerous to Life and Health (IDLH) | Rapid accumulation during startup in a confined space without ventilation |
Although API Publ 2008 is a historical publication that has been superseded, its implementation recommendations for equipment siting and monitoring remain the foundation of modern safe practices in gas turbine power generation.
The document stresses that exhaust stacks must extend a minimum safe height above the roofline of the turbine building and surrounding structures to ensure adequate dispersion. The stack exit velocity must be sufficient to prevent the downward wash of the exhaust plume. Modern facilities use wind tunnel testing or computational fluid dynamics (CFD) to validate these separations, a requirement implicitly driven by the logic laid out in the 1976 publication.
Combustion air intakes for the turbine and fresh air intakes for the building HVAC system must be placed outside the zone of influence of the exhaust plume. The publication was among the first to formally link the clinical effects of CO poisoning to the physical design layout of a power generation facility.
The publication was an early proponent of installing continuous ambient CO monitors in turbine buildings and control rooms. Early detection alerts personnel to slow leaks or re-entrainment events before cognitive symptoms appear, providing critical time for evacuation or life-safety response.
From an audit and compliance perspective, API Publ 2008 is no longer a current consensus standard. It has been technically superseded by broader industry guidelines and regulatory codes. However, it remains a critical foundational reference for understanding the specific risk of gas turbine generator emissions. In incident investigation and legal proceedings, the 1976 publication is frequently cited as evidence that the industry has been aware of the lethal risks of CO from gas turbines for over five decades.
Facilities engineers in 2026 must recognize that while turbine hardware and sensor technology have evolved, the physical laws governing combustion and toxicology remain constant. The historical document serves as a permanent reminder that safety protocols for CO poisoning rely on the unchanging engineering principles of source isolation, dilution ventilation, stack/intake separation, and continuous atmospheric monitoring.
Reference Note: This article reviews the historical context and technical safety principles of API Publication 2008 (first edition, 1976 scan). Engineers and safety professionals are encouraged to consult the latest applicable codes, standards, and regulatory requirements for specific design and compliance in 2026.