Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

General Lab safety.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "General Lab safety."— Presentation transcript:

1 General Lab safety

2 Outline General Lab Safety General Explosive Synthesis Safety
Chemical Product Safety

3 Initial Considerations
In any lab-type situation always consider safety in the following order Personal Safety Laboratory Activities & Storage of Laboratory Materials Safe Clean-up and Disposal Considerations

4 Safety & Emergency Equipment
Eye protection Lab coats or aprons Gloves Eye wash or shower Fume hood or ventilation Fire fighting materials Materials storage cabinets Safety Data Sheets

5 Cardinal Lab Rules No eating, drinking , or chewing the lab
Never use lab glassware as food or beverage containers Never touch, taste, or smell a chemical unless instructed Wash your hands with soap and water before and after experiments

6 Cardinal Lab Rules Remove or secure watches, rings and other loose items while working in the lab Keep your hands away from your clothing, eyes, face, and skin Always use a pipette bulb to transfer when using a pipette

7 Cardinal Lab Rules Keep the workspace clean and clear of any obstructions and excess equipment Keep supplies and equipment in an easily accessible location Spills should be quickly contained and the area secured Never leave a heat source unattended

8 General Eye Safety Eye protection should be worn at all times in the lab Remove contact lenses while in the lab Never look into a container as you are opening or heating it If a chemical gets in your eye, flush in water for 15 minutes, and seek medical help

9 General Glassware Safety
Use caution when handling hot glassware Hot glassware looks just like cold glassware Do not place hot glassware in cold water or ice bath Pour fluids down a glass stirring rod to prevent splattering

10 General Chemical Safety
Ensure all chemicals and reagent containers are labeled Read all labels before removing a chemical from the container If a chemical spills on your skin, rinse with water for 15 minutes Never pour water into a concentrated acid. Acid should be poured slowly into water. Never return unused chemicals to their original containers

11 General Explosive Synthesis Safety
Read and understand the experiment before performing it READ provided procedures and FOLLOW them All experimentation during course must be supervised by an instructor Always have a large volume of ice water on hand Use small quantities to control reactions

12 General Explosive Synthesis Safety
Do not play with chemicals for the sake of curiosity Follow all explosive safety rules: Avoid any friction when opening and closing containers Be aware of static No rough handling of HME

13 Don’t Let This Happen All chemical laboratories have hazards associated with the storage, safe use & handling, and disposal of chemicals. Awareness of the most basic level of chemical incompatibilities decreases hazards associated with gathering intelligence in such circumstances. At the very least avoid the following: i) Mixtures of fuels with oxidizers and catalysts ii) Products that are acidic, chunky, and old

14 Chemicals & Your Responsibility
Know where to obtain information about hazardous chemicals used in your work area Read and understand hazards before you start working Use required PPE Follow procedures for disposal and spill clean-up Ask questions if you are not sure The information is out there, ignorance is no excuse

15 Hazard Communication Hazardous chemicals and physical/ health hazards
Safety Data Sheets (formerly MSDS) Container Labels NFPA and HMIS Chemical Hazard Classes compatibility and reactivity Hazard Symbols and Definitions Other Chemistry Resources

16 How Do Hazardous Chemicals Affect the Body?
It depends on several factors: The physical form of the chemical How the chemical enters the body The amount of chemical that enters the body (dose) How toxic (poisonous) the chemical is

17 How Chemicals Enter the Body
Most Common Three entry routes Inhalation – breathing in the chemical Absorption – chemical soaks through skin Ingestion – swallowing the chemical Least Common

18 Chronic Toxicity and Acute Toxicity
Some chemicals will only make you sick if you get an “acute” or high dose all at once. Example – ammonia Some chemicals are mainly known for their chronic or long-term effects. Example – asbestos Most chemicals have both acute and chronic effects. Example – carbon monoxide

19 Chemical Exposure Limits
PEL Many chemicals have exposure limits, or allowable amounts of a chemical in the air. These limits are often called “Permissible Exposure Limits” or “Threshold Limit Values”. They are based on 8-hour average exposure or ceiling or peak levels. Levels must be kept below these limits for safety. TLV

20 Remove any one of these = no fire
Flammable Materials Fire requires three things Fuel Oxidizer Heat (usually spark or flame) Flammable materials provide the fuel source Many materials have toxic combustion products Remove any one of these = no fire Image: Wikipedia, (24 May 2016)

21 Flammability Terms Lower Explosive Limit
Minimum concentration in air at which vapors or gas become flammable (volume %) Upper Explosive Limit Maximum concentration in air at which vapors or gas are flammable (volume %) Flash Point Lowest temperature at which a material will produce vapors that can ignite Image: clipart Auto-Ignition Temperature: minimum temperature at which a material will spontaneously ignite

22 Flammability Limits Methane (CH4) Acetylene (C2H2)
LEL 5% UEL 15% Acetylene (C2H2) LEL 2.5% UEL 100% Carbon Monoxide (CO) LEL 12.5% UEL 74% Ammonia (NH3) LEL 15% UEL 28% Acetone (CH3COCH3) LEL 2.6% UEL 13% Ethanol (C2H5OH) LEL 3.3% UEL 19% Benzene (C6H6) LEL 1.3% UEL 7.9% LEAN FLAMMABLE RICH

23 Acetone A colorless and very flammable liquid with a sweet solvent smell  Acetone is available in just about every hardware store Uses Household paint solvent Some nail polish removers Production of cocaine

24 Corrosive Materials Materials that cause visible destruction or irreversible alterations in living tissue at point of contact Acids: proton donors (H+) Bases (alkalis): proton acceptors, also contain OH- pH = -log[H+] Image: clipart pH Scale Acidic Neutral Basic Highly Corrosive Highly Corrosive

25 Common Corrosive Materials
Acids Inorganic Nitric Acid (HNO3) Sulfuric Acid (H2SO4) Phosphoric Acid (H3PO4) Organic Glacial Acetic Acid (C2H4O2) Bases Sodium Hydroxide (NaOH) Potassium Hydroxide (KOH) Calcium Hydroxide (Ca(OH)2) Magnesium Hydroxide (Mg(OH)2) Image: clipart

26 Hydrochloric Acid A colorless and odorless solution of hydrogen chloride and water Also known as muriatic acid or spirit of salt Uses Concrete Cleaner Auto body paint pretreatment Precious metal reclamation PVC manufacturing Household cleaners Oil-well acidization Cocaine manufacture Energetic Material PPT-Peroxide

27 Common Items- Hydrochloric Acid
Muriatic acid is sold in most hardware stores Cleaning mortar away from bricks May have yellow tint Found in pool supply stores for balancing pH Approximately 30% concentration

28 Sulfuric Acid A colorless odorless liquid
Discolors skin and nails yellow  Uses Lead car batteries Agriculture, metal and oil industries Production of cocaine and other narcotics Traditional acid used to make TATP

29 H2SO4 Drain Cleaners

30 Oxidizing Materials Oxygen containing material that readily gives up its oxygen Material that readily takes on electrons Many chemical reactions are reduction/oxidation reactions Material that does not burn, but supports combustion Often very reactive or unstable Image: Personal Blog, (25 May 2016)

31 Common Oxidizers O N O OH Oxidizers O2 in air Halogens
Oxygen containing molecules Inorganic oxidizer names often end with –ate or –ide Sodium Chlorate (NaClO3) Hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) Potassium permanganate (KMnO4) Nitric Acid (HNO3) O N O OH Image: Wikimedia, April 2016)

32 Nitric Acid Colorless when new, may have yellow/red tint
Highly corrosive and toxic Concentrated may be fuming Used as an oxidizing agent Reacts with metals Will turn skin yellow

33 Highly Reactive Materials
Some materials can undergo reactions that rapidly release energy Organic peroxides Heat, shock, or light sensitive Incompatible materials (acids/bases) Self reactive (acetylene, azides) Water reactive (Group 1 metals) Pyrophoric (fine metals, metal hydrides) Hazardous polymerization (vinyl acetate) Image: Photo taken by NEK personnel

34 Hazardous Mixtures Many materials can combine to produce a very dangerous result Examples Corrosive + poison  toxic vapors Corrosive + flammable  heat and fire/explosion Corrosives + water  heat and vapors Corrosives + metal  heat and flammable H2 Image: Wikipedia, (11 April 16)

35 How Do You Get Information About Chemicals?
Two ways: Safety Data Sheet (SDS) From the label on the product

36 Safety Data Sheets (SDS)
Replace former MSDS sheets OSHA has adopted Globally Harmonized System (GHS) for chemical data sheets (SDS) Global use for chemical information (HAZCOM standard) 16 standardized sections arranged in a strict order

37 Safety Data Sheets Section 1, Identification
Section 2, Hazard(s) identification Label Hazard Pictograms Section 3, Composition/information on ingredients Section 4, First-aid measures Section 5, Fire-fighting measures Section 6, Accidental release measures Clean up Section 7, Handling and storage Incompatibilities Section 8, Exposure controls/personal protection PEL, PPE, etc… Section 9, Physical and chemical properties Section 10, Stability and reactivity Section 11, Toxicological information Section 12, Ecological information* Section 13, Disposal considerations* Not enforced by OSHA Section 14, Transport information* Section 15, Regulatory information* Section 16, Other information

38 GHS Hazard Labels Container labels MUST contain six mandated pieces of information

39 GHS Hazard Pictograms

40 Container Labeling Each container of a hazardous chemical must be properly labeled Containers must be compatible with the chemicals contained in them. During Course: Report missing labels to instructor. Temporary storage only requires chemical name (e.g a beaker being used for a reaction)

41 National Firefighters Protection Association (NFPA)
NFPA Fire Diamond: Hazards for emergency response personnel

42 HMIS (Hazardous Materials Information System)
HMIS Color Bar Warnings for individuals with long-term exposure Greater Number (0-4) = Greater Hazard PPE Designations A = Safety glasses B = Safety glasses, gloves C = Safety glasses, gloves, chemical apron D = Face shield, gloves, chemical apron E = Safety glasses, gloves, dust respirator F = safety glasses, gloves, chemical apron, dust respirator G = Safety glasses, gloves, vapor respirator H = Splash goggles, gloves, chemical apron, vapor respirator I = Safety glasses, gloves, dust and vapor respirator J = Splash goggles, gloves, chemical apron, dust and vapor respirator K = Air line hood or mask, gloves, full chemical suit, boots

43 Chemical Incompatibilities
Keep oxidizers separate from everything else Some oxidizers are incompatible with one another such as Nitrates and Chlorates/Hypochlorite Keep acids separate from everything else Keep mineral acids separate from organic acids Keep Nitric acid separate from Hydrochloric and Sulfuric acids Separate fuels, oxidizers, and corrosives from each other Keep Hydrogen peroxide separate from everything else Keep metal powders separate from everything else

44 Chemical Incompatibility Matrix
Hydrochloric, Sulfuric Acetic, Citric Nitric Ammonia, Hydroxides Peroxides, Chlorates(ites) Lead, Mercury Formaldehyde Acetone, Alcohols Group I & II Metals

45 Chemical Storage Storage areas for hazardous substances should be secured, properly ventilated, and identified by signs.

46 UN Hazard Classes Explosives Gases Flammable Liquids Flammable Solids
Oxidizing Agents & Organic Peroxides Toxic and Infectious Substances Radioactive Substances Corrosive Substances Miscellaneous Hazards

47 Class 1: Explosives Class 1 Divisions:
1.1 Explosives with a mass explosion hazard e.g. nitroglycerin /dynamite 1.2 Explosives with a blast/projection hazard e.g. cannon shells / bombs 1.3 Explosives with predominantly a fire hazard e.g. rocket propellant, display fireworks 1.4 Explosives with no significant blast hazard, but major fire hazard e.g. consumer fireworks, ammunition 1.5 Very insensitive explosives with a mass explosion hazard e.g. construction or demolition explosives, blasting agents 1.6 Extremely insensitive explosives

48 Class 2. Gases Compressed, liquefied or dissolved under pressure
Some gases have subsidiary risk poisonous or corrosive classes Class 2 Divisions: 2.1 Flammable gases (ignite on contact with an ignition source) e.g. Acetylene and Hydrogen 2.2 Non-Flammable gases (neither flammable nor poisonous) e.g. cryogenic gases/liquids and rocket fuels, Nitrogen and Neon 2.3 Poisonous gases (liable to cause death / serious injury if inhaled) e.g. Fluorine, Chlorine, and Hydrogen cyanide.

49 Class 3. Flammable Liquids
Flammable liquids are classed based on boiling point and flash point Packing Group I: boiling point of 35°C/95°F or less at sea-level and any flash point e.g. Diethyl ether or Carbon disulfide Packing Group II: boiling point greater than 35°C/95°F at sea-level and a flash point less than 23°C/73.4°F e.g. gasoline (petrol) and Acetone Packing Group III: criteria for Packing Group I or II not met e.g. kerosene and diesel.

50 Class 4. Flammable Solids
Class 4 Divisions: 4.1 Flammable Solids (easily ignited and readily combustible) e.g. nitrocellulose, magnesium, safety or strike-anywhere matches 4.2 Spontaneously Combustible (ignite spontaneously) e.g. aluminum alkyls, white phosphorus 4.3 Dangerous when Wet (emit a flammable gas when wet or react violently with water) e.g. sodium, calcium, potassium, calcium carbide

51 Class 5. Oxidizers & Organic Peroxides
Class 5 Divisions: 5.1 Oxidizing substances (either liquid or solid) e.g. Calcium hypochlorite, Ammonium nitrate, Hydrogen peroxide, Potassium permanganate 5.2 Organic peroxides (either liquid or solid) e.g. Benzoyl peroxides, Cumene hydroperoxide

52 Class 6. Toxic and Infectious Substances
Class 6 Divisions: 6.1 Toxic substances e.g. Potassium cyanide, Mercuric chloride, Pesticides, Methylene chloride 6.2 Infectious Substances e.g. smallpox , HIV, cultures, pathology specimens, used iv needles

53 Class 7. Radioactive Radioactive substances comprise substances or a combination of substances which emit ionizing radiation e.g. Uranium, Plutonium

54 Class 8. Corrosives Corrosive substances are substances that can dissolve organic tissue or severely corrode certain metals Class 8 Divisions: 8.1 Acids e.g. Sulfuric acid, Hydrochloric acid 8.2 Alkalis e.g. Potassium hydroxide, Sodium hydroxide

55 9. Miscellaneous Hazardous substances that do not fall into the other categories but may present a hazard during transportation e.g. asbestos, air-bag inflators, self inflating life rafts, dry ice

56 Resources for Chemical Products
Thermofisher, HazMatID and HazMasterG3 devices Lab and Chemical Supply Companies Fisher Scientific, VWR, Sigma-Aldrich Chemistry Handbooks The CRC, Lange’s, Merck Index, Sigma-Aldrich Catalog

57 Resources for Chemical Products
CAMEO Chemicals Wireless Information System for Emergency Responders (WISER) Household Products Database

58 Resources for the Home Chemist
Sam Barros’ Power Labs Sciencemadness Nerd Rage on You Tube TheHomeScientist on You Tube Skylighter pyrotechnics

59 Online Chemistry Resources
Free Chemical Databases First Hand Descriptions from Chemists

60 Online Resources (Cont’d)
Chemical Segregation, Incompatibilities, and Description of Reaction Characteristics water reactive chemicals and description of reaction

61 Lab Safety Summary General Lab Safety
General Explosive Synthesis Safety Chemical Product Safety


Download ppt "General Lab safety."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google