Protective coveralls help protect the human body from harmful factors in risky areas, such as high pressure, cold, heat, microorganism and effects against falling. Personal protective equipment covered by the Personal Protective Equipment Regulation CE certification To be able to make transactions, it is necessary to determine which category they belong to.
EN Standards are the technical standards accepted by the committees formed by the Standard Authorities in Europe. These technical standards include minimum performance requirements for a variety of products, including Personal Protective Equipment (PPE), and test methodsIt determines.
Protective coveralls are commercialized only with two categories of product directives listed:
Personal Protective Equipment (EPI): Regulated by the European Directive 89/686 / CEE.
This category includes Globes, Protective Clothing, and Face Masks (FFP).
Medical Devices (PS): Regulated by the 93/42 / CEE Directive (transposed by the Royal Decree 1591/2009).
There are designated disposable clothing such as Coveralls and White Coats and Surgical Masks.

It is not possible to export all products in the 23 product groups where the CE Mark (certificate) is mandatory, without the CE Mark (certificate). It is also not possible to be placing on the market of products in Turkey. product with the CE mark according to recent legal changes in Turkey (document) has become mandatory to carry. By this time, all CE marking (certificate) will be brought to the compulsory products.

TS EN 340
Protective clothing - General features
This standard covers information about ergonomic, harmlessness, size representation, aging, compatibility and marking of protective clothing and information to be provided by the manufacturer with protective clothing.

TS EN 1073-2
Protective clothing against radioactive contamination - Part 2: Rules and test methods for non-ventilated protective clothing against radioactive contamination in particulate form
This standard covers the rules and test methods for unventilated protective clothing that protects the wearer of the protective suit (user) against radioactive contamination (contamination) in the form of solid particles. This type of clothing is intended to protect the wearer's body, arms and legs only, but can also be used with accessories to protect the wearer's additional areas (eg boots, gloves, RPE). Protection for these additional regions has been established in other European Standards.

TS EN ISO 13982-1
Protective clothing for use against solid particles - Part 1: Performance rules for chemical protective clothing that protects the entire body against airborne solid particles (type 5 clothing)
This standard covers minimum rules for chemical protective clothing resistant to the penetration of airborne solid particles (type 5). These garments, for example, will wear the body, arms and legs that cover the body, arms and legs, such as one-piece jumpsuits or two-piece dresses with or without foot protection, with or without a hood or visors. Rules for component parts such as hoods, gloves, boots, visors or respiratory protective equipment (RPE) can be specified in other international and European Standards. This standard can only be applied to airborne solid particles. This standard cannot be applied to other forms of loading by solid chemicals (eg penetration of chemical powders through materials by rubbing or bending) that can form objects of separate standards.

TS EN 13034
Protective clothing against liquid chemicals - Performance rules for protective clothing with limited protection against liquid chemicals (type 6 and type pb [6] equipment)
This standard covers both chemical protective clothing (Type 6) and partial body protectors (Type PB [6]).

TS EN 14126
Protective clothing - Against pathogenic organisms - Performance characteristics and test methods
This standard covers the rules and test methods for reusable and limited use protective clothing that protect against pathogenic organisms.

TS EN 14605
Protective clothing - Against liquid chemicals - Performance characteristics for those who wear only part of the body (type pb [3] and type pb [4]), wear joints (type 3) or spray-proof (type 4)
This standard covers minimum rules for the following limited use and reusable chemical protective clothing: - Headgear, gloves, boots, eye shields or respiratory protective equipment, which can be specified in other European standards, with liquid-tight joints between the different parts of the garment. They will wear all parts of the body with liquid-tight joints to the component parts (Type 3: Liquid-tight clothing). Examples of these clothes; They are one-piece jumpsuits or two-piece clothing with or without a hood, with or without an eye shield, without eye shield, with protective boots inside boots or with protective socks inside the boots, with protective boots over the dust or without protective boots, with gloves or gloves. - Wear full-body protective clothing with spray-proof joints between the different parts of the clothing, with spray-proof joints and, if applicable, components such as caps, gloves, boots, eye shields or respiratory protective equipment that can be specified in other European standards (Type 4: Spray-proof clothing ). Examples of these clothes; They are one-piece jumpsuits or two-piece clothing with or without a hood, with or without eye shield, without eye shield, with protective boots inside boots or with protective socks inside the boots, with protective boots over the boots or without boots, with gloves or gloves. - They will wear a part of the body that protects certain parts of the body against the passage of chemical fluids. Examples of these clothes; laboratory gowns, jackets, trousers, gowns, sleeves, hoods (without ventilation) etc. This standard covers performance rules only for garment materials and seams, as the part of the body that protects part of the body leaves some body parts unprotected. NOTE - Part of the body that only protects against the penetration of chemical fluids is covered by chemical protective clothing, EN 13034 (Type PB [6]).

TS EN 374-1
Protective gloves - Against chemicals and microorganisms - Part 1: Terms and rules of performance
This standard covers the rules necessary to protect people who wear gloves against chemicals and / or microorganisms and describes the terms to be used.

Three test methods are applied:
• Permeability test according to EN 374-2 standard
Penetration testing according to EN 374-3 standard, replacing EN 16523-1 standard
• Distortion test according to EN 374-3 standard

However, not all products have to comply with these requirements, and some tend to create confusion for their apparent purposes. This applies to most fabric, non-fabric or plastic disposable clothing such as overalls, coats, trousers, aprons and so on. For example, cellulose products (hand dryer coils, towels, etc.) are also with other items such as reclosable bags or trays.

TÜRCERT has tested and tested products such as protective overalls, gloves and aprons. CE document supports the producers.