A Pressure vessel for human occupancy is a container that is intended to be occupied by one or more persons at a pressure which differs from ambient by at least 2 pounds per square inch (0.14 bar). Since 1977, the American Society of Mechanical Engineers PVHO committee has published standards governing the construction of a number of structures which are defined as Pressure Vessels for Human Occupancy. The current standard is PVHO-1-2019.[1] Similar standards are published by a range of national and international standards organisations.
List of PVHO types
- decompression chambers
 - Closed diving bells, also known as dry bells or personnel transfer capsules
 - High altitude chambers
 - hyperbaric chambers
 - hyperbaric stretchers
 - medical hyperbaric oxygenation facilities
 - recompression chambers
 - submarines
 - Manned submersibles
 - Atmospheric diving suits
 
Nuclear reactor containments, aerospace cabins, caissons or mild hyperbaric chambers are not considered to be PVHOs according to the standard.
References
- ↑ "PVHO-1-2007" (PDF). Public.Resource.Org, Inc. Retrieved September 4, 2015.
 
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