- Learn proper collection techniques to avoid contamination.
- Handle sample preservation and transport for sites like rivers, wells, or industrial discharge points
Key Components of Industrial Safety Training
1. Field & Lab Sampling
2. Testing Water Quality Parameters
- Hands-on exercises typically include:
- Physical: pH, turbidity, temperature, color, odor.
- Chemical: TDS, hardness, alkalinity, nutrients (like nitrates), chloride, fluoride.
- Microbiological: Total coliforms, E. coli, pathogens.
3. Hands-on Instrumentation
Participants get practical training on:
- Basic meters: pH, conductivity, turbidity.
- Advanced tools: Spectrophotometers, TOC analyzers, ion chromatographs, flame photometers.
- Calibration, setup, and troubleshooting of devices.
4. Data Analysis & Interpretation
- Analyze results: Constructing standard curves, interpreting chromatograms.
- Understand what results mean: compliance vs. contamination.
- Prepare and present laboratory reports with clear conclusions.
5. Quality Assurance & Regulatory Standards
- Follow QA/QC protocols, calibration routines, lab safety procedures.
- Relate results to standards: WHO, EPA, ISI, NABL.
6. Field Visits & Real-World Context
- Many programs include site visits to labs or water sources for real testing environments.
- Learn sample collection in the field and test onsite.
Who Should Attend?
Final-year undergrads, postgraduates, lab technicians, environmental professionals, NGO workers, and municipal staff.