prudent practices in the laboratory and hazardous waste management presented by: department of...
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Prudent Practices in the Laboratory and
Hazardous Waste Management
Presented by: Department of Safety • & Risk Management• University of Rhode Island• 177 Plains Road• Kingston , RI 02881• Tel: 401-874-2618• Fax: 401-789-5126• E-mail: [email protected]• Web: http://www.uri.edu/safety• Instructor: Barbara Ray, Hazmat
Coordinator• 2006
UPDATE: (Mandatory) RI Fire Code Announcement
• In all places of assembly (50 or more seats) the following announcement must be made:
1.The emergency exits are located (state locations and point out)
2. All attendees must evacuate when so directed by public announcement or when the fire alarm sounds
When: first class, all public seminars
Prudent Practices in the Laboratory and Hazardous Waste Management
Why is this so important?
• Protect worker health
• Safeguard environment
• Prevent accidents and injuries
• Prepare for emergencies
• It’s the law
• Regulatory compliance prevents fines
• Receive grants from federal and state agencies
• Reduce insurance costs
Regulations• OSHA (Occupational Safety and Health Administration)• 29 CFR 1910.1450 Occupational Exposures to Hazardous
Chemicals in Laboratories *(The Lab Standard)• Performance Based • Protects Worker Health and Safety in the Workplace• * based on book Prudent Practices by National Research
Council• See http:www.nap.edu/books/0309052297.html• EPA (Environmental Protection Agency)• 40 CFR 260-265, 270• Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA)• Regulation Based - no options - follow exact rules• Protects Environment
Responsibility and Accountability
Everyone Has Responsibility for Chemical Hygiene and Lab Safety and Proper Disposal of Hazardous
Waste at the University of Rhode IslandPresidentDeansDepartment ChairsPrincipal InvestigatorsLaboratory workersStudentsDepartment of Safety and Risk ManagementChemical Hygiene Officers
Prudent Planning of Experiments
• Define goals of the experiment• Research the hazards of the chemicals involved
before use - consult MSDSs, Labels, and reference materials for prudent practice
• Write Standard Operating Procedures for use of hazardous materials and apparatus
• Follow safety guidelines in the lab and URI CHP• Consider risk assessment, acquisition and
storage of chemicals, handling of chemicals and equipment, and disposal of waste
Chemical Hygiene Plan (CHP)
• Document required by federal law in every laboratory in US where hazardous chemicals are in use
• Laboratory personnel must be familiar with URI’s CHP and laboratory SOPs
• The Chemical Hygiene Plan provides provisions for protecting personnel from the “health hazards associated with the chemicals present in that laboratory”
Contents of A Chemical Hygiene Plan (CHP)
1. Written Standard OperatingProcedures (SOPs) for safe chemical use
2. Control Measures to reduce exposure: ventilation, PPE, hygiene practices
3. Performance testing of hoods and PPE
4. Training: Hazards of chemicals, location of CHP, PEL of chemicals, signs and symptoms of exposure, MSDS and other reference materials
5. Identify operations so hazardous they require prior approval; ex. Highly toxic or highly volatile chemicals
6. Provision for Medical exams:a) If employee shows signs or
symptoms;b) If air monitoring
concentration>PEL; c) If explosion, large spill or other event
results in the potential of exposure
7. Designate Chemical Hygiene Officer
8. Must provide additional protection for particularly hazardous substances: select carcinogens, reproductive toxins, chemicals with high acute toxicity
9. Maintain showers and eyewashes in operable condition. Test periodically. Clean eyewashes weekly
What Does Your Lab Need to Do to Comply?
1. DEVELOP LABORATORY-SPECIFIC CHEMICAL HYGIENE PLAN-Follow guidelines in URI generic Chemical Hygiene Plan.
2. Adopt good chemical hygiene and prudent laboratory practices.3. Make sure chemical Inventory is complete and up to date.4. Use the inventory to identify those chemicals that meet the definition
of carcinogens, reproductive toxins, and acutely hazardous chemicals and “designate areas” for appropriate use.
5. Use appropriate Personal Protective Equipment (PPE).6. Write Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) for each lab to
minimize occupational exposure to acutely hazardous chemicals, carcinogens and reproductive toxins.
7. Use acutely hazardous chemicals in hoods for proper ventilation control.
8. Store hazardous chemicals by hazard class.9. Inspect container integrity/condition frequently.
What Does Your Lab Need to Do to Comply? (cont.)
10. Label all containers in lab with chemical name and hazard. No unknown containers.
11. Maintain MSDS for each hazardous chemical12. Medical Monitoring is required if signs and symptoms of
exposure occur.13. Air monitoring is required if signs and symptoms of
exposure occur.14. Successfully complete the annual lab inspection by SRM.15. Attend annual training.16. Follow the URI Laboratory Waste Guide and manage
hazardous waste correctly.17. Plan ahead to prevent accidents and emergencies.18. Practice Pollution Prevention and Waste Minimization
Material Safety Data Sheet
• Document created by chemical manufacturer, exporter, or distributor.
• Describes material, it’s risks, and certain protective steps user MUST take
• Must be kept on file for >30 years
• Must be available to all actual/potentially exposed employees
• Supervisors responsible for obtaining and interpreting MSDS for new products
• Should be up-to-date
• Employer has responsibility to ensure availability
• Must be available while personnel are working, without restraint to access
Hazards Evaluation and Risk AssessmentMaterial Safety Data Sheets
MSDS
• Contains information on the chemical identity; manufacturer; physical, chemical, and health hazards; target organ health effects; precautionary measures for safe handling handling and storage; PPE; emergency procedures; and first aid measures
• All warning labels placed on chemicals in the laboratory should be based on the MSDS
Where to Find MSDS
Sources of MSDS:
Internet-manufacturers web sites
GOOGLE: acetone and MSDS
http://www.hazard.com
http://uri.chemwatchna.com
User name URI, PW 1951
How Does OSHA Define A Hazardous Chemical?Terms found on the MSDS
Health Hazards carcinogens irritants reproductive toxins corrosives sensitizers neurotoxins hepatotoxins nephrotoxins agents that act on the hematopoietic system agents that damage the lungs, skin, eyes, or mucus membranes “Target Organ Effects”
• Physical Hazards
• combustible liquid
• a compressed gas
• an explosive
• an organic peroxide
• an oxidizer
• pyrophoric
• flammable
• or reactive
For exposure information see:NIOSH Pocket Guide to Chemical HazardsNIOSH=National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health
1-800-356-4674 www.cdc.gov/niosh/homepage.html
Important values from MSDS– PEL – permissible exposure limit – 8 hr TWA
– STEL - short-term exposure limit - 15min. TWA
– TWA - time weighted average - exposure to chemical
– IDLH - immediately dangerous to life/health
– CEILING limit - Concentration must not be exceeded for any time period during day
– *Exposures must be kept below the PEL or (air) monitoring and medical surveillance are required and other OSHA regulations apply. 29CFR1910.1450
Duration and Frequency of Exposure
• Single - acute– damage results from a
single, short-duration exposure
– hydrogen cyanide, hydrogen sulfide, nitrogen dioxide
• Intermittent - repeated
• Long-term - chronic– repeated or long-
duration exposure– damage evident after a
long latency period– all carcinogens– reproductive toxins– heavy metals and their
compounds
Dose-Response
• Range of concentrations that result in a graded effect between the extremes of no effect and death
• Dose - amount of chemical
• Response - effect of the chemical
• LD50 - Lethal Dose 50 mg/kg
• LC50 - Lethal (air) Concentration 50
ppm or mg/m3
What Is A Toxic Chemical?
Toxicity Rating
Animal LD50
(mg/kg)
Lethal Dose Ingestion
150 lb. human
Example
Extremely toxic
Less than 5
< 7 drops Dimethyl Mercury
Highly toxic
5-50 7 drops to 1 teaspoon
Mercury 29,
Sodium azide 27
Moderately toxic
50-500 1 teaspoon to 1 ounce
Ammonium hydroxide 350, phenol 317
Slightly toxic
500-5000 1 ounce to 1 pint
Methylene chloride 1600, Chloroform 908
Practically non-toxic
> 5000 > 1 pint Ethyl acetate 5620,
Ethanol 7060
Guidelines for Evaluating Toxic Chemical Hazards: When to Use the Hood
1. Check the Permissible Exposure Limits and Threshold Limit ValuesUse the hood if the PEL or TLV < 50 ppm or 100mg/m3 (air concentration)
2. If there is no PEL check the LC50 (air) values
Use the hood if the LC50 is < 200 ppm or 2000 mg/m3 ( air concentration)
3. If there is no PEL check the LD50 (oral rat) values
Use the hood if the following conditions are met:Solids or nonvolatile liquids <50 ppmToxic gases or volatile liquids < 500 ppm
Olfactory thresholds may not be trustworthy or known.
Sources: Developing a Chemical Hygiene Plan, J.A. Young, W. K. Kingsley. G. H. Wahl,American Chemical Society, 1996. (p.15)
Carcinogens
• Carcinogen: a substance that causes cancer
• Known carcinogens: benzene, cadmium, coal tar, ethylene oxide, tobacco smoking, radon.
• Probable carcinogens: acetaldehyde, acrylonitrile, carbon tetrachloride, chloroform.
• If present at 0.1% in a product carcinogenic ingredient must be listed on MSDS
• http://ehp.niehs.nih.gov/roc.toc10.html
• Report on Carcinogens, 11th edition.
Reproductive Toxins
• Mutagens - substances that may cause a change in the genetic material of a cell
• Teratogens - substances that may cause physical or metabolic defects in the fetus- esp. in first trimester
• Sterility/infertility - male or female• Lactation - chemical may be transferred from
mother to baby through breast milk• CDC website has articles on male and female
reproductive hazards http:www.cdc.gov
MSDS Signs and Symptoms of Chemical Exposure
Behavior ChangeBreathing DifficultyChange in Complexion/Skin ColorCoughingDroolingFatigue/weaknessIrritation of eyes/noseHeadacheNausea
Tightness of chestBreathing difficultyCoordination difficultyDizzinessDiarrheaIrritabilityLight-headednessSneezing Sweating
Routes of Exposure
• Inhalation• Contact with skin or eyes• Ingestion• Injection (punctures from
sharps and needle sticks)
• NO EATING, DRINKING, SMOKING, OR APPLYING COSMETICS IN LABS
• NO FOOD OR DRINK IN LAB REFRIGERATORS OR MICROWAVES
• NO CHEMICALS IN FOOD OR BEVERAGE CONTAINERS
• NO MOUTH PIPETTING OF BIOHAZARDS, HAZARDOUS CHEMICALS, OR RADIOACTIVE MATERIALS
Minimizing Exposure
• Avoiding eye injury
• Avoiding ingestion of Hazardous Chemicals
• Avoiding Inhalation of Hazardous Chemicals
• Wash hands frequently
• Avoiding Injection of Hazardous Chemicals
• Minimizing Skin Contact
• Use fume hoods
• Use PPE: Safety glasses, lab coat, gloves, aprons but remember to remove PPE before leaving lab; don’t take contamination home!
Avoiding Chemical Exposure Administrative Controls
Written standard operating procedures (SOPs) Training Documentation Knowledge
reading and understanding MSDSs and labels before use of new chemical - know the hazards
PPE - gloves, eye protection [safety glasses, safety goggles, face shield], proper foot wear, coat/apron per MSDS recommendation
Respirators require pre-approval, fit testing, written plan, medical
evaluation and annual re-training - require SRM prior approval
Avoiding Chemical Exposurecontinued
Follow OSHA guidelines for regulated carcinogenic chemicals - see handout
Don’t work alone when using hazardous materials and procedures
Plan ahead for potential emergencies know location of eye wash and safety showers, fire
blankets, fire extinguishers, spill kits, evacuation routes, and MSDSs
Engineering Controls Hoods and Ventilation systems Biological safety cabinets Glove boxes
Choose and Use the Appropriate Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)
• Always select PPE that is right for the task• Eye Protection: Face Shield, goggles, safety glasses with
side shields. Goggles required when corrosives in use. Preferred when contact lenses in use.
• Lab Coat, rubber apron• Gloves (remove sharp rings from fingers)• Select correct material, check permeation time, correct
thickness for chemicals in use/application• Have a dress code in labs: No exposed mid-riff skin,
sandals or open-toed shoes, short shorts. Tie back long hair. Minimize use of rayon fabrics-very flammable
Personal Protective Equipment:Glove Selection Guide
• GLOVE MATERIAL SELECTION GUIDE• CHEMICAL FAMILY BUTYLRUBBER NEOPRENE PVC (VINYL) NITRILE NATURAL LATEX
• Acetates G NR NR NR NR• Acids, inorganic G E E E E• Acids, organic E E E E E• Acetonitrile, Acrylonitrile G E G S E• Alcohols E E NR E E• Aldehydes E G NR S* NR• Amines S NR NR F NR• Bases, inorganic E E E E E• Ethers G F NR E NR• Halogens (liquids) G NR F E NR• Inks G E E S F• Ketones E G NR NR G• Nitro compounds : Nitrobenzene, Nitromethane• G NR NR NR NR• Oleic Acid E E F E NR• Phenols E E NR NR G• Quinones NR E G E E• Solvents, Aliphatic NR NR F G NR• Solvents, Aromatic NR NR F F NR
• Rhode Island Law requires that a sign be posted if latex gloves are used.• *Not recommended for Acetaldehyde, use Butyl Rubber• S – Superior, E – Excellent, G – Good, F – Fair, NR - Not Recommended
Personal Protective Equipment: Eyewearmust meet ANSI z87.1
COMPARISON CHART - EYE PROTECTION DEVICES
Type of Hazard Goggles Glasses (No SideShields)
Glasses (Shields) Face Shield(Various Sizes)
Front Splash Excellent Good Good Excellent
Side Splash Excellent Poor Good Good to ExcellentFront FlyingObject
Excellent Good Good Excellent ifAdequateThickness
Side Impact Excellent Poor Fair Good to ExcellentNeck, FaceProtection
Poor Poor Poor Depends on Typeand Length
Comfort toWearer
Fair Good to Very Good Good Fair
User Acceptance Poor Very Good Good Good for ShortPeriods
Use Lifetime Fair Very Good Very Good FairCost Moderate Moderate Moderate Moderate
(Depending onType)
Hazard Identification:
Labels
• Commercially packaged chemical containers received since 1986 meet current labeling requirements
• Name, address and telephone number of manufacturer
• Emergency number• Must be in English• Base on data on MSDS• Write full name, no abbreviations
• Chemical identification • Identity of hazard components• Appropriate hazard warnings• Immediate use containers need
the name of the chemical contents
• NO “unknowns” or unlabelled containers allowed
• NFPA: Values range from 0 (no hazard) to 4 (lethal/very dangerous)
• Blue (health), Red (fire), Yellow (reactive), White (special)
NFPA
Housekeeping• Never obstruct access to
exits and emergency equipment
• Clean work areas regularly
• If children are permitted in labs, i.e. educational activity, make sure there is direct supervision
• Do not store chemical containers on the floor
• Secure compressed gas cylinders to walls or benches
• Do not use floors, stairways or hallways as storage areas
• Keep minimum amount of chemicals on lab bench. Keep other chemicals in storage cabinet.
Transport of Chemicals
• Use break- resistant secondary containers
• Cylinders strapped to a cylinder cart and valve protected
• No passengers on elevators while transporting chemicals
Storage of Chemicals
• Keep minimum quantities on hand
• Label properly• Special hazards on
label• Use explosion-proof
refrigerators for flammables
• Use storage trays or secondary containment to minimize spills from leaking bottles or breaks
• Store chemicals by hazard class (not in alphabetical order) to eliminate incompatible storage
Storage Areas of Chemicals
• Must be labeled properly• Labels must be accurate; visible• Exterior door surfaces must state hazards -
[“designated”] areas for OSHA regulated chemicals, reproductive toxins and carcinogens
• Emergency Contact on Door– add phone # of responsible person in the
event of accidental release, exposure, etc.
When is a “Designated Area” Sign Needed?
• Use designated area sign when these types of chemicals are present:
• Chemicals of High Toxicity (Acute or Chronic) • Carcinogens• Reproductive Toxins
Warning• Designated Area for Handling the following substances with High
Acute or Chronic Toxicity, Carcinogenic,Reproductive Toxins • Benzene – carcinogen• [List substances – identify hazard]• Authorized Personnel Only
Working Alone and Unattended Experiments
• Avoid working alone - develop list of high hazard operations that cannot be done when alone- need prior approval from supervisor
• Make arrangements for individuals working alone to check on each other
• Design experiments to prevent the release of hazardous substances in the event of utilities shutting down (power failure)
• Laboratory lights should be left on at all times
• Arrangements should be made for someone to check on the operation
• Information should be posted indicating how to contact the responsible individual
Writing Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs)
• Required for OSHA regulated chemicals• Required for OSHA Select Carcinogens• Required for all Reproductive Toxins• Required for all Hazardous Chemicals• Required for toxic gases especially with NFPA value of 3 or 4
• What to put on an SOP:• Chemical Name, Hazards, PPE, Administrative Controls,
Engineering Controls,Special Handling and Storage Requirements, Lab Specific Procedures-Detail how lab is going to Minimize Exposure, Spill and Accident Procedures, Decontamination Procedures, Waste Disposal Procedures, Location of MSDS, Document that all lab workers (employees and students) have read and understand MSDSs and SOPs
When to Re-Write/Review Standard Operating Procedures
• New hazardous chemical introduced to lab
• New hazardous process/equipment: lasers, high voltage, radioactivity, etc.
• New employee or student
• Change in procedure
• Accident or near miss occurs
Acquisition of Chemicals
• Considerations when ordering chemicals– available from another
laboratory
– minimum quantity needed
– optimize size container for storage
– proper management of chemical
– time sensitive materials
• Considerations when receiving chemicals– delivery to departmental offices
(personnel trained?)
– expectations if there is a spill, stock spill kits
– compressed gas deliveries (have cart handy)
– think twice before receiving “gifts”. The cost for disposal may outweigh the initial savings
Inventory and Tracking of Chemicals• Maintain an up-to-date chemical
inventory. If inventory has been bar-coded coordinate with SRM for new additions and deletions
• Date chemicals when received and again when opened
• Disposal of chemical if not needed within a reasonable time
• Containers should be inspected frequently. Replace those in deteriorating condition.
• Decommission labs before lab personnel leave
• Develop plan for moving chemicals when labs are renovated
• Dispose /recycle chemicals before the expiration date
• Cull from inventory chemicals that require special handling or are time sensitive
• Examples: Peroxide formers: acetaldehyde, dioxane, ethyl ether, tetrahydrofuran [O-O]
Record Keeping
• Chemical Inventory Lists - 30 years
• All MSDSs - 30 years*• Training - 5 years*• Exposures - 30 years - keep
records of exposure monitoring and medical monitoring*
• Work-related injuries and illnesses - one year*
• Training Certificates, inventories, inspection reports, SOPs, etc. should be retained in laboratory
* Federal Requirement
Training
29CFR1910.1450, the OSHA Lab Standard requires that employees are to be apprised by training and Information of any hazardous chemical in the work area:
• At the time of employee’s initial assignment to area• Prior to assignments involving new exposures situations
• All individuals working in labs with chemicals MUST take SRM’s “Prudent Practices in the Laboratory & Hazardous Waste Management” Training (yearly refresher class)
• ALL other employees with the potential for chemical exposure must take “Hazard Communication” Training (yearly refresher class)
Hazmat Security
• Keep labs storing chemicals, biohazards and radioactive materials locked when unattended.
• Allow only authorized personnel in labs. Escort visitors.
• Keep accurate inventories of hazardous materials and laboratory supplies.
• Report suspicious behavior to campus police. • Call 874-2121 all emergencies
Shipping Hazardous Materials
• All packages being offered for transport by commercial carrier, air, rail or truck, must follow USDOT regulations.
• All packages must be packaged, marked, labeled, and documented properly.
• See http://www.uri.edu/safety for details.
Safety Showers and Eyewashes
1. Run plumbed eyewashes weekly to remove bacteria and dust. Use clean wipe if not plumbed.
2. Inspect/test all units annually for mechanical performance. Need to use containment shower curtain and bucket. Need plumber for old systems to make sure shut-off valve works.
3. Locate emergency equipment within 10 second walk from hazard; level- no stairs or ramps.
4. Water must be tepid. Check temperature when testing.5. Align flow of eyewashes using chart6. The drain dilemma if no drain then use of shower can make trip
hazard; if drain -then need acid neutralization tank. These have maintenance issues and not widely used any more.
Reference: ANSI Z358.1Emergency Eye Wash and Shower Equipment
Design of New Buildings
Avoid safety issues of the past:1. Proper loading dock for receipt and pick-up of chemicals2. Proper ventilation in stockrooms - 20 air changes/hr.3. Proper ventilation in labs – 10 air changes/hr4. Adequate eyewashes and showers5. Store more flammable solvents in stockrooms, not individual
labs. 6. Take field trips-UCONN, PFIZER7. Develop concept for all the new buildings as a complex8. Achieve economies of scale by centralizing, not duplicating
facilities: stockrooms, instrument rooms, wash-down hood, etc.
Role of the Safety Committees
1. Establish Departmental Safety Committees
2. Track injuries, accidents, fires, explosions in teaching and research labs. Try to prevent recurrence of accidents and injuries.
3. Review teaching lab experiments for hazards. Substitute less dangerous chemicals and procedures where feasible.
4. Report dangerous conditions to Facilities Services for repairs and maintenance.
5. Establish lock-out /tagout procedures when hoods and other equipment are taken out of services. Use Signs, notification.
6. Identity and fix those things within the department that you can fix. Get rid of old equipment that sparks or has damaged cords.
BiosafetyBacteriaVirusesFungiParasites
All work with infectious agents must be pre-authorized by the URI Biosafety Committee
http://www.absa.orghttp://www.cdc.gov
Use PPE, Hazard Communication, biological safety cabinets, containment, frequent hand washing, disinfection
Infectious Agents (plant or animal) are categorized in risk groups based on their relative risks
BSL-1: biological agents pose low risk to personnel and the environment; unlikely to cause disease in healthy workers, plants or animals
BSL-2: biological agents that pose moderate risk to personnel and the environment; rarely cause infection that would lead to serious disease
BSL-3: infectious agents may cause serious or lethal disease by exposure by inhalation
BSL-4: high risk of life threatening disease
Common OSHA Violations
1. Failure to communicate hazards of chemicals
2. Unlabelled containers
3. Lack of PPE or incorrect PPE 4. Lack of training of new employees or when
hazard changes
5. Food and beverage containers in areas where chemical exposure is possible.
URI Environmental Principles
1. Comply with all applicable regulations
2. Educate and train all personnel on programs and procedures
3. Minimize University impact on the environment and surrounding community (SPCC and SWMP)
4. Continually reduce URI impact to the environment by implementation of pollution prevention and waste minimization
5. Develop environmental management systems (EMS)
Green Chemistry: EPA 12 Principles
1. Prevent waste
2. Design safer chemicals and products
3. Design less hazardous chemical syntheses
4. Use renewable feedstocks
5. Use catalysts, not stoichiometric reagents
6. Avoid chemical derivatives
7. Maximize atom economy
8. Use safer solvents and reaction Conditions
9. Increase energy efficiency
10. Design chemicals and products to degrade after use
11. Analyse in real time to prevent pollution
12. Minimize the potential for accidentsPrudent Practice: Since
chemicals are “cradle to grave”. Buy, use, store, and dispose the minimum amount.
EPA’s Hierarchy of Pollution Prevention
• Source Elimination and Reduction– Source elimination of waste stream– Chemical recovery ( solvent distillation)– Chemical substitution of less hazardous material– Micro-scale experiments– Alternative teaching methods - virtual experiments– Use digital photography rather than wet chemistry
• Recycling and Reuse– Redistribution of chemicals to new owner
• Treatment – render less hazardous prior to disposal• Disposal
EPA Hazardous Waste Identification
Reactivereacts w/ air or water
Toxichighly toxic - LD50 <50mg/kgcarcinogen, fatal RI toxic LD50 < 5000mg/kg
Listedi.e. pesticides
pyridine, toluene
Wastes are considered
hazardous if they exhibit
one or moreof the following characteristics:
CorrosiveRCRA: pH<2 or >12.5Sewer prohibited: pH <5.5 & >9.5
Ignitable Flash Point <93°C
Disposal of Chemicals
• Containers should be:
– compatible with waste
– clean, sturdy, leak proof
– closed, tight-fitting
– appropriate size
– under control of person producing waste
– label with Hazardous Waste Label
• Hazardous Waste Label:– Identify hazardous waste– Write full chemical
names, no abbreviations– list all components and
percentages– identify hazard properties– name, location and phone
number of generator– remove extraneous
labels/bar codes
Disposal of Chemicals continued
• Hazardous Waste Accumulation Areas:– Located in the lab– Clearly marked– Segregate incompatibles– Secondary Containment– Spill kit (spill pads, sand)– Emergency information
posted– Maximum storage: 55
gallons or 1 quart of (“P”, acutely hazardous waste
– Pick-up for Disposal:• SRM is responsible for
retrieval and transport• When bottle is “full”,
arrange for immediate disposal
• Fax form 789-5126• and call 874-2618• Container is labeled• Remove bar code labels• Knowledgeable user
available for pick-up
Disposal of Chemicals
HCL /H2Ohydrochloric acid
Wrong Way Right Way
Crawford 255Gregory
4 L total
50%water 50%
• Biomedical– Biohazardous– Infectious– Pathological– Sharps: needles, syringes,
scalpels, broken/unbroken microscope slides, Pasteur pipets - use “sharps box”
• Animals
Biological Waste Management
Source Reduction and other ways to Minimize Hazardous Waste
• Minimize chemical orders– just-in-time ordering, do
not overstock, buy smallest feasible sizes
• Strategies to avoid multi-hazard waste– substitution of materials
• Minimize hazardous waste– micro-scale work– step-by-step planning
for minimization– substitution of less toxic
chemicals
Common EPA Hazardous Waste Violations in Labs
1. Waste not “at or near point of generation”2. Unknowns = unlabelled waste containers3. Abandoned waste - have check out procedure for all chemicals when students or staff leave the lab.4. Containers open – 15 minute rule5. Incompatible wastes not segregated.6. Satellite waste accumulation area not designated.7. Too much waste in satellite area > 55 gallons or 1 quart of acutely hazardous,”P,” wasteFines = $32,500/ violation/day
Fire Code: Chemical Storage
• 1. There is a maximum quantity of hazardous chemicals that is allowed in a building.• There is a maximum quantity of chemicals that can be stored in any given fire control zone.
The type of chemicals determine the f ire rating , 2hour, 4 hour, etc. of doors and other building materials that is required.
• The amount of chemicals that can be stored in a laboratory is limited. Many fire jurisdictions restrict this working quantity to a one week supply of flammable and combustible liquids.
• Most of the flammable/combustible chemicals should be in “inside storage rooms”, “[stockrooms]”, separated from other occupancies, with high rates of ventilation. The exhaust ventilation must be powered by a back-up generator.
• NFPA 3&4 gases require gas cabinets with sensor alarms to detect leaks.• NFPA 45 Laboratories > 10,000 sq. ft prohibited unless sprinklered.• Instructional and research laboratories have different allowed quantities of
flammable/combustible chemicals.
• Reference: NFPA 30 (OSHA 1910.106) Flammable and Combustible Liquids, • NFPA 45 Standard on Fire Protection for Laboratories Using Chemicals
Fire Code: Flash/Boiling Points for NFPA Categories
Flash Point Flash Point Boiling
Point
Boiling
Point
Examples
Type ˚F ˚C ˚F ˚C
Class IA <73 <22.8 <100 <37.8 Ethyl ether, isopentane
Class IB <73 <22.8 >100 >37.8 Acetone, ethanol, toluene, gasoline
Class IC 73-100 22.8-37.8 MIBK, xylene
Class II 100-140 37.8-60 #2 fuel oil, kerosene
Class IIIA 140-200 60-93.3 Cyclohexanol, aniline
Class IIIB >200 >93.3 ethylene glycol
Flash Point: Minimum temperature at which a liquid or solid emits vapor sufficient to form an ignitable mixture with air near the surface of the solid or liquid.
Fire Code: Maximum Quantities of Chemicals Allowed in Laboratories*
Lab unit hazard class
Flammable,
Combustible Liquid Class
Max/100 sq.ft. Max/lab
Without Sprinklers
Max/lab
With Sprinklers
A (High) 1
I,II,IIIa
10 gallons
20 gallons
300 gallons
400 gallons
600 gallons
800 gallons
B (Moderate) 1
I,II,IIIA
5 gallons
10 gallons
150gallons
200 gallons
300 gallons
400 gallons
C (Low) 1
I,II,IIIA
2 gallons
4gallons
75 gallons
100gallons
150 gallons
200 gallons
D (Minimum) 1
I,II,IIIA
1.1 gallons
1.1gallons
37 gallons
37 gallons
75 gallons
75 gallons
•Flammables storage cabinets are designed to contain fire for 10 minutes to provide you time to escape. Keep doors shut, bungs in place unless mechanically ventilated. Quantity = stored + in use + waste. *Quantity doubles if flammable storage cabinets in use.
Distribution of Chemicals in Buildings: Max. Qty. Allowed Per Floor
Floor level
Above grade
% of Max. Allowable Qty. of entire bldg.
# Control area per floor
Fire barrier rating (hours)
6 12.5 2 2
5 12.5 2 2
4 12.5 2 2
3 50 2 1
2 75 3 1
1 100 4 1
-1, below grade 75 3 1
Fire Safety in Labs
• PROPER CHEMICAL USE AND STORAGE
• Store minimum amount of flammable chemicals in lab
• Design new buildings with proper stockrooms and use them
• Store flammable materials properly in flammables cabinet
• Eliminate sources of static electricity and sparking equipment
• Use proper rate of ventilation
• Frequently check peroxide formers
• Do not mix incompatible chemicals
• Keep picric acid wet!
• Check on Lithium Battery Recalls- Dell, Apple, Kycera phones
Chemical Accidents
• A copy of the MSDS should go to the hospital with a victim who has been contaminated.
• File accident report with Human Resources (staff) in the case of a serious chemical exposure. Students file reports at Potter Health Clinic.
• General decontamination procedure is to flush affected area with water for a minimum of 15 minutes.
Responding to Accidents and Emergencies
• Evacuate– assess hazards and
dangers- if unknown, assume the worst and evacuate
• Confine– Close doors and isolate
area
• Report– from a safe place call
874-2121 for emergency personnel to clean-up spill and provide medical attention
• Secure– area until emergency
personnel arrive
All Emergencies
• To report spills, fires, medical assistance, etc. call campus police 874-2121 which is monitored 24/7
• Call Safety and Risk Management at• 874-2618 for routine calls and technical
information
All Emergencies