Chemical Hygiene Plan

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Chemical Hygiene

CSD Chemical Hygiene Plan

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Plan

Adapted From Flinn Scientific

CSD Chemical Hygiene Plan

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Chemical Hygiene Officer Appointment

In compliance with the Federal Laboratory Standard ______________________ (School

Name) realizes our responsibility for the protection of our employees. We hereby

institute the enclosed Chemical Hygiene Plan to assist us in our safety program.

______________________________________________(School name) hereby

appoints___________________________________(Hygiene officer’s name) to be our

Chemical Hygiene Officer. We acknowledge the Chemical Hygiene Officer has the

knowledge and authority to implement and enforce our Chemical Hygiene Plan.

Although we _________________________________________(School name) are

designating _____________________________(Hygiene officer’s name) as our Chemical

Hygiene Officer, we realize the success or lack of success of our Chemical Hygiene Plan

rests with all of our employees.

_____________________________ _____________________________

Hygiene Officer Signature

Principal Signature

_____________________________ _____________________________

Science Teacher Signature

Science Teacher Signature

_____________________________ _____________________________

Science Teacher Signature

Science Teacher Signature

_____________________________ _____________________________

Science Teacher Signature

Science Teacher Signature

_____________________________

Date

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Introduction:

In 1990, the Occupational Exposure to Hazardous Chemicals (OSHA) instituted “The Laboratory Standard”-Occupational Exposure to Hazardous Chemicals in Laboratories. This new “Laboratory Standard” has been designed to address the specific safety needs of the laboratory. The laboratory standard ensures that employees who work in a lab setting will be protected from any chemical exposure that exceeds permissible exposure limits and that employees will be educated as to the hazardous nature of the chemicals they use in the lab. To achieve this goal, the Laboratory Standard requires the school district to appoint a chemical hygiene office to develop, implement, and monitor a chemical hygiene plan. a. Record all chemical exposures and use monitoring instruments to get hard data. Obtain and keep up-to-date information provided by a medical examination resulting from a chemical exposure. b. Keep these records and allow employees access to their personal records, including all employee exposure and medical records. 2. Train employees to: a. Understand the hazards of chemicals they use in the lab b. Recognize signs and symptoms associated with overexposure to hazardous chemicals. c. Properly use personal protective equipment (Fume hoods, goggles, respirators, etc.) d. Protect themselves from chemical exposure by following good lab procedures. e. Understand the content of the Chemical Hygiene Plan. 3. Provide employees access to: a. MSDS (Materials Safety Data Sheets) for all hazardous materials. b. Previous exposure records (if any). c. The laboratory standard and chemical hygiene plan d. Permissible exposure limits of hazardous chemicals used in the lab e. Their own personal medical records (if any) School Responsibilities: 1. Appoint a Chemical Hygiene officer. 2. Maintain and understand a Chemical Hygiene plan. 3. Upon receipt of chemicals: a. Make sure you have the MSDS b. Make sure the label is proper and contains the minimum amount of information. (chemical name, concentration, hazard information, name and address of manufacturer or name of preparer and date of preparation. 4. Maintain a current inventory of all chemicals. District Responsibilities: 1. Record all employee exposures to hazardous chemicals.

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5. Properly organize all lab chemicals. 6. Properly dispose of hazardous and nonhazardous chemicals.

Chemical Hygiene Plan Overview

1. Standard Operating Procedures

a. General Employee Rules and Procedures

b. General Laboratory Rules and Procedures

c. Personal Hygiene Guidelines

d. Protective Clothing Requirements

e. Housekeeping Rules

f. Spill and Accident Procedures

g. Chemical Storage Rules and Procedures

i. Compressed Gas

ii. Flammable Chemicals

iii. Corrosive Materials

h. Procedure – Specific safety Rules and Guidelines

i.

Prior-Approval-Required Procedures

j.

Safety Equipment Inspection

M,n2. Emergency Evacuation Plan

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Standard Operating Procedures

1. General Employee Rules and Procedures 1. Minimize all chemical exposures

2. Skin contact or inhalation of chemicals should be avoided 3. Avoid underestimation of chemical hazards and risks 4. Develop a firm goggle policy, and wear appropriate eye protection at all times. 5. Never work alone in the lab, chemical storage or prep areas. 6. Flammable liquids require special attention. Never use these materials near any source of ignition, spark, or flame. 7. Never perform a first-time chemical demonstration in front of your class. 8. Never store chemicals over, under, or near a sink. 9. Only authorized personnel should be allowed in the chemical storeroom. 10. Have 100% wool fire blanket easily accessible in case of an accident or fire. 11. Know the locations for all personal safety and emergency equipment. 12. Train all students on how to use all safety devices in the lab, and how to find the safety devices quickly in an emergency. 13. Know appropriate procedures in the even of a power failure. 14. Know where and how to use master utility controls to shut off gas, electrical and water supplies. 15. Use a safety shield whenever an explosion or implosion might occur. 16. Read all chemical labels prior to use. 17. Know and understand the hazards of the chemical as stated in the MSDS and other references. 18. Maintain an MSDS library for all chemicals used or stored in the facility. 19. Use protective safety equipment to reduce potential explosive (gloves, respirator, fume hood, etc.) 20. Do not smell or taste chemicals. 21. Know how to properly store all chemicals in their compatible chemical families. 22. Know proper procedures for transporting chemicals around the school. 23. Know and implement proper disposal procedures before ordering or using any chemical 24. Know appropriate emergency procedures, evacuation routes, and fire emergency notifications. 25. Know the proper procedure for contacting the authorities. 26. Know and understand the personal hygiene practices outlined in the chemical hygiene plan.

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2. General Laboratory Rules and Procedures 1. Create a written first aid policy. 2. Post emergency telephone numbers in the classroom/laboratory. Have a telephone or some means of emergency communication in lab. 3. The lab should be well-ventilated. 4. All laboratories must have an eyewash capable of treating both eyes continuously for 15 minutes with copious quantities of potable water. 5. All teachers, employees, and students must be taught how to use the eyewash quickly in case of an emergency. 6. Eyewash effectiveness and operation should be inspected and activated at least every three months. 7. Safety showers or body drenches should be provided. Showers should be inspected and activated at least every six months. 8. Have appropriate types and sizes of fire extinguishers. 9. All labs must have 100% wool fire blanket available for spills and fire suppression. 10. An approved eye wash station, fire blanket, and fire extinguisher should be within 10 seconds of the chemical store areas. 11. Neutralizing chemicals, such as a spill kit, dry sand, kitty litter, and other spill control materials should be readily available. 12. All safety items must be visible and placarded. 13. In the event of an accident, fill out an accident report describing the event in detail. 14. Read all labels carefully. 15. Be thoroughly familiar with hazards, safety precautions, and disposal procedures before using any chemical. Study the MSDS and label before using any chemical substance. 16. Unlabeled products should not be stores anywhere in the school. 17. All exits must be clearly marked. 18. Keep all aisles clear and uncluttered. 19. Access to exists, emergency equipment, and master utility controls must never be locked. 20. Have an alternative evacuation route in the even your primary route becomes blocked. 21. Practice your emergency plans. 22. No food in the laboratory. 23. Do not operate electric equipment with wet hands. 24. Do not use thermometers as a stirring rod. 25. Dispose of chemicals properly. All disposal procedures should conform to state and local regulations, 26. Labs and storerooms must undergo annual inspection.

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3. Personal Hygiene Guidelines 1. Do not apply cosmetics, eat, chew gum, or drink in the lab. 2. The use of tobacco products is prohibited. 3. Do not pipet by mouth – always use a pipet bulb or other appropriate suction device. 4. Clean work area thoroughly before leaving the lab. 5. Wash hands thoroughly after any chemical exposure and before leaving the lab. 6. Never smell chemicals directly; always waft the odors to your nose using your hand. 7. Foodstuffs, opened or closed, become part of your chemical supplies when brought into the laboratory, chemical prep, or storage area. 8. Never taste any substance to determine its identity. 9. Do not wear shorts 10. Do not wear loose or baggy clothing. 11. Tie back long hair. 12. Avoid the use of contact lenses in the lab. 13. Do not wear hanging jewelry. 14. Do not wear an absorbent watchstrap. 4. Protective Clothing Requirement 1. Appropriate eye protection must always be worn by teacher, students, and visitors. 2. Wear eye protection and face shields when dealing with extremely corrosive liquids. 3. Goggles should be cleaned/sterilized between uses. 4. Wear gloves that offer protection for all hazards you may find in the lab. 5. Always wear full-length lab coat or a chemical-resistant apron when performing experiments, preparing chemical solutions, and during cleanup in the lab. 6. Wear a respirator with the appropriate cartridge if you feel you might exceed permissible exposure limits as specified in the MSDS. 15. Insect all protective safety equipment before use. 16. Do not wear open toed shoes or sandals of any kind.

5. Housekeeping Rules 1. Keep all chemicals in a locked chemical prep storage area. 2. Waste materials require proper containers and labels. 3. Do not store items in the fume hood.

4. Label all chemicals, even solutions with: chemical name, concentration, hazard information, name and address of manufacturer or name of preparer and date of preparation. 5. Clean up spills properly and promptly. 6. Work and floor surfaces should be cleaned regularly and kept free of clutter.

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6. Spill and Accident Procedure 1. Remember “NEAR”

Notify – Call for Help Evacuate – Get everyone to a safe location. Assemble – Assemble to a safe location. Report – Fill out a detailed accident report after the emergency is over. 2. Clean up spills immediately and thoroughly. 3. A bucket of dry sand should be available to aid in providing traction on a slippery floor after a spill. 4. To make it easier to clean up, transport, and dispose, an absorbing agent, such as kitty litter, should be used to absorb a liquid spill. 5. Neutralizer for both acid and base spills should be available in the event of a chemical spill. 6. A 100% wool fire blanket will contain and control a spill and its vapors if no other spill control materials are available. 7. Chemical Storage Rules and Procedures 1. Post emergency telephone numbers in the classroom/lab. 2. Keep an updated inventory of all chemicals, their amounts and locations. Chemicals should be examined annually. 3. Establish a procedure to update the chemical inventory by updating the quantity of each chemical as it is used and restocked. 4. Label all chemical solutions you make with the identity of the contents, date, concentration, hazards information, and your name. 5. Label all chemicals with a purchase data. 6. Establish a separate, secure, and locked storage area for chemicals. 7. Do not allow incoming shipments of chemicals to be opened and transported by school personnel other than qualified science teachers. 8. All chemicals should be stored in chemically compatible families. 9. Determine the maximum amount of a chemical needed for two-three years of instruction and order and store only this amount. 10. Store corrosives in appropriate corrosive cabinets. 11. All flammable materials should be stored in an approved flammable storage cabinet. 12. Do not store chemicals under the fume hood. 13. Avoid storing chemicals on shelves above eye level. 14. Shelves should be equipped with lips to prevent containers from rolling off. 15. Chemicals should not be stored on the floor except in approved shipping containers. 16. The chemical storage area should be ventilated by at least four changes of air per hour. 17. Store all poisons inside a locked cabinet.

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18. Only authorize personnel are allowed in the chemical storage area. Students should NEVER be allowed in this area. 19. Avoid exposing chemicals to heat or direct sunlight.

8. Gas Handling Instructions 1.Compressed gases should be handled as high energy sources, and therefore, as potential explosives. 2.Always protect the cylinder valve stem. 3.Avoid exposure of cylinders to heat. Do not store gas cylinders in direct sunlight. 4.Never lubricate, modify, force or tamper with a cylinder valve. 5.Cylinders of toxic, flammable or reactive gases should be used only under a fume hood. 6.Do not extinguish a flame involving a combustible gas until the gas is shut off— otherwise it can reignite—possibly causing an explosion. 7. Gas cylinders must be secured in place. They must be protected to prevent valve damage which may be caused by falling.

9. Flammable Chemicals Handling Instructions 1.Store all flammables in a dedicated flammables cabinet. 2.Keep cool, between 55°F and 80°F, at all times. 3.Store away from all sources of ignition. 4. Store away from all oxidizers.

5. Never store flammables in refrigerators unless the refrigerator is explosion proof. 6. Avoid storing any chemicals, especially flammable materials in direct sunlight. Flammable Chemicals should be returned to the Chem Prep room for storage and Disposal. 10. Corrosive Materials Handling Instructions 1.Store corrosives in appropriate corrosives cabinets. 2.If possible, keep certain items in the original shipping package, e.g., acids and bases in the special and expensive Styrofoam cubes. 3.Working with corrosive materials requires special eyewear. Wear a chemical splash face shield when handling corrosive materials. 4.At least every three months inspect all shelf clips in your acid cabinet to check for possible corrosion. These shelf clips are the only thing between you and a collapsed shelf. They require special attention. 5. Corrosive chemicals should be returned to the Chemistry Prep room for storage and/or removal by the chemical waste service. 11. Procedure Specific Safety Rules and Guidelines (for extremely hazardous chemicals) 1. Use a fume hood when the permissible exposure limit for a chemical is less than 50 ppm as indicated on the chemical MSDS. 2. Use carcinogens, mutagens, teratogens and allergens only under a fume hood. 3. Handle toxic, corrosive, flammable and noxious chemicals under a fume hood.

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4. Do not expose flammable liquids to open flame, sparks, heat or any source of ignition. 5. Only use flammable solids (sodium, potassium, lithium, etc.) in very small quantities. 6. Use a safety shield when igniting flammable solids. 7. Water-reactive solids (sodium metal, potassium metal, etc.)should be stored under dry oil 8. Open cans of ether (ethyl ether should be properly disposed of after use and not stored unless absolutely necessary. There may be some procedures which require prior approval before an instructor attempts to perform them. These procedures must be determined by cooperation and communication between the Science Department and the Chemical Hygiene Officer. 13. Safety Equipment Inspection There are many safety items necessary for compliance to the Laboratory Standard. They include, but are not limited to: 1. Eyewashes. 2. Fire extinguishers. 3. Goggles. 4. Respirators. One of the most important sections of the Laboratory Standard States that all safety equipment In the facility must always be in good operating condition. While the Laboratory Standard requires some safety equipment and highly recommends other equipment, the standard is very clear on the point that if you have a piece of safety equipment, it must be functional at all times. This statement applies to all safety equipment, required or recommended. 1. Goggles always must be clean and functional. 2. Laboratory ventilation must meet standards and be tested quarterly. 3. A respirator must be fit tested and the appropriate cartridges must be available. 4. Fire extinguishers must be the right type, and they must always be properly inspected. 5. Eyewashes must be functional and flushed at least once a month. 6. Fume hoods must be operational at the level of 70-100 linear feet per minute as measured by a velometer. All of the above items and all safety equipment must be inspected every three months at the Minimum. Any safety equipment failing this quarterly inspection or reported to be out of order at any time must be repaired immediately. Any safety equipment found to be out of order is a serious violation of the laboratory standard. 9.Rely on expiration date to dispose of the material. 10. Glycerin should be available only to the instructor. 12. Prior Approval Procedures

14. Emergency Evacuation Plan Establish a chain of communication. John tells Sally, Sally tells Bill, Bill notifies the Office, the office notifies the fire department, etc. Remember, notify before

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Proceeding to handle the incident. It is often better to notify someone else than to Proceed in addressing the problem at hand by yourself.

Evacuation may or may not be necessary depending on the incident. Once it has been Determined evacuation is necessary, proceed in an orderly fashion as you would in a Fire drill evacuation. Send everyone to a pre-designated area and then count heads To make sure everyone is out of the building. Proper evacuation procedures must be thoroughly planned, detailed in writing, and Properly communicated in advance. In case of an emergency, you will not have time To determine “What do I do nest?”. This evacuation will be part of the Chemical Hygiene Plan.

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CSD Chemical Hygiene Plan

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SUGGESTED SEQUENCE OF STEPS TO MORE SAFELY ORGANIZE YOUR SCHOOL’S CHEMICAL STORES AREA

Take an inventory of all the chemicals in your school. You will never know the extent of your problem until you know exactly what you have. Record the inventory. You may want to consider the purchase of the FLINN CHEMICAL INVENTORY SYSTEM to facilitate this task.

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Decide what products you will need for the next year (at best, two years). Ruthlessly rid yourselves of the remainder of the accumulated materials.

Reorganize the remaining products into their compatible chemical families (see our Suggested Chemical Storage Pattern on page 1075). The actual sequence of compatible families on your shelves is not critical. What is important is to keep the compatible families separate and to keep the organic and inorganic families as far apart as possible. The Suggested Shelf Storage Pattern shown on pages 1075–1076 is only one suggested sequence you can use. If shelf space is a problem, you are permitted to place more than one compatible family on a shelf. Make sure you either have a physical divider or leave a 3" space between each family. Hundreds of teachers who have reorganized their shelves, using these patterns, tell us products are easier to find versus the alphabetical system previously used. When you reorganize, you may need some estimate of the percentage of shelf space each family might occupy. If yours is a “typical” high school, the following profile may be a helpful guide: 3

Inorganic Families

Families

Percentage of Shelf Space Occupied Store away from all other items. Store in a dedicated acid cabinet. Store nitric acid away from all other materials.

Families

Percentage of Shelf Space Occupied

Acids

Sulfides, etc. (Inorganic 5) Chlorates,

Less than 1%

(Inorganic 9)

5+%

Metals, etc.

Less than 5%

Perchlorates, etc. (Inorganic 6) Arsenates, etc. (Inorganic 7) Borates, Chromates, etc. (Inorganic 8) Sulfur, Phosphorus, etc. (Inorganic 10)

(Inorganic 1) Halides, Sulfates,

Could be 35–40% of available space. This is usually the largest family.

Less than 1%

Phosphates, Acetates, etc. (Inorganic 2) Nitrates, etc. (Inorganic 3) Hydroxides, Oxides, etc. (Inorganic 4)

Less than 1%

Approximately 8–10%

Approximately 3%

Approximately 10%

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And Organic Families Organic acids (Organic 1) will probably occupy about 5+% of your organic shelf space except for acetic acid which should be stored with the inorganic acids (hydrochloric, etc.) in a dedicated acid cabinet. Keep acetic acid away from nitric acid. If your school is “typical,” the remainder of your organic materials may occupy about 15–20% of your total shelf space. You should store all flammable organics in a dedicated flammables cabinet.

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And Other Materials There may be some very large space consumers in 2-kilogram (5-lb.) containers; i.e., calcium chloride, calcium hydroxide, etc. Certainly you may wish to extend family storage in a separate location for such large volumes of large packages.

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Congratulations! You have now reorganized your chemical stores facility to: • store compatible products together • lock up all poisons • separate acids into dedicated storage • record all inventory • separate flammables into dedicated storage

• rid yourselves of excess materials

YOU NOW HAVE A SAFER FACILITY

© 2008 Flinn Scientific, Inc. All Rights Reserved

SUGGESTED CHEMICAL STORAGE PATTERN Storage of laboratory chemicals presents an ongoing safety hazard for school science departments. There are many chemicals that are incompatible with each other. The common method of storing these products in alphabetical order sometimes results in incompatible neighbors. For example, storing strong oxidizing materials next to organic chemicals can present a hazard. A possible solution is to separate chemicals into their organic and inorganic families and then to further divide the materials into related and compatible families. Below is a list of compatible families. On the next page you will find this family arrangement pictured as shelf areas in your chemical stores area. The pictured shelf arrange- ment will easily enable you to rearrange your inventory into a safer and more compatible environment.

Inorganic

Organic 1. Acids, Amino Acids, Anhydrides, Peracids 2. Alcohols, Glycols, Sugars, Amines, Amides, Imines, Imides

1. Metals, Hydrides 2. Acetates, Halides, Iodides, Sulfates, Sulfites, Thiosulfates, Phosphates, Halogens, Oxalates, Phthalates, Oleates 3. Amides, Nitrates (except Ammonium Nitrate), Nitrites, Azides 4. Hydroxides, Oxides, Silicates, Carbonates, Carbon 5. Sulfides, Selenides, Phosphides, Carbides, Nitrides 6. Chlorates, Bromates, Iodates, Chlorites, Hypochlorites, Perchlorates, Perchloric Acid, Peroxides, Hydrogen Peroxide 7. Arsenates, Cyanides, Cyanates 8. Borates, Chromates, Manganates, Permanganates, Molybdates, Vanadates 9. Acids (except Nitric) (Nitric Acid is isolated and stored by itself.) 10. Sulfur, Phosphorus, Arsenic, Phosphorus Pentoxide 11. Inorganic miscellaneous

3. Hydrocarbons, Esters, Aldehydes, Oils 4. Ethers, Ketones, Ketenes, Halogenated Hydrocarbons, Ethylene Oxide 5. Epoxy Compounds, Isocyanates 6. Peroxides, Hydroperoxides, Azides 7. Sulfides, Polysulfides, Sulfoxides, Nitriles 8. Phenols, Cresols

9. Dyes, Stains, Indicators 10. Organic miscellaneous

NOTE: If you store volatile materials (ether, hydrocarbons, etc.) in a refrigerator, the refrigerator must be explosion-proof. The thermostat switch or light switch in a standard refrigerator may spark and set off the volatile fumes inside and thus cause an explosion.

This list is not complete and is intended only to cover the materials possibly found in an average school situation. This is not the only method of arranging these materials and is only offered as a suggestion.

See the next three pages for detailed inventory and storage steps you might follow to vastly improve the safety profile of your chemical storage.

© 2008 Flinn Scientific, Inc. All Rights Reserved

SUGGESTED SHELF STORAGE PATTERN—INORGANIC

INORGANIC #7 Arsenates, Cyanides, Cyanates (Store away from any water.)

INORGANIC #10 Sulfur, Phosphorus, Arsenic, Phosphorus Pentoxide

INORGANIC #2 Halides, Sulfates, Sulfites,

INORGANIC #5 Sulfides, Selenides, Phosphides, Carbides, Nitrides

Thiosulfates, Phosphates, Halogens, Acetates, Oxalates, Phthalates, Oleates

INORGANIC #3 Amides, Nitrates (not Ammonium Nitrate), Nitrites, Azides

INORGANIC #8 Borates, Chromates, Manganates, Permanganates, Molybdates, Vanadates

(Store Ammonium Nitrate away from all other substances— ISOLATE IT! )

INORGANIC #6 Chlorates, Bromates, Iodates, Chlorites,

INORGANIC #1 Metals & Hydrides (Store away from any water.) (Store flammable solids in flammables cabinet.)

Hypochlorites, Perchlorates, Perchloric Acid, Peroxides, Hydrogen Peroxide

INORGANIC #4 Hydroxides, Oxides, Silicates, Carbonates, Carbon

MISCELLANEOUS

If possible avoid using the floor.

Storage Suggestions 1. Avoid storing chemicals on the floor (even temporarily). 2. No top shelf chemical storage. 3. No chemicals stored above eye level. 4. Shelf assemblies are firmly secured to walls. Avoid island shelf assemblies. 5. Provide anti-roll-off lips on all shelves. 6. Ideally, shelving assemblies would be of wood construction. 7. Avoid adjustable metal shelf supports and clips. Better to use fixed, wooden supports. 8. Store acids in a dedicated acid cabinet. Store nitric acid in the same cabinet only if isolated from other acids. Store both inorganic and some organic acids in the acid cabinet. 9. Store flammables in a dedicated flammables cabinet. 10. Store severe poisons in a dedicated poisons cabinet.

INORGANIC #9

Acids, except Nitric

(Acids are best stored in dedicated cabinets.)

Store nitric acid away from other acids unless your acid cabinet provides a separate compartment for nitric acid.

OTHER STORAGE SUGGESTIONS ARE CONTAINED THROUGHOUT THIS CATALOG/REFERENCE MANUAL.

© 2008 Flinn Scientific, Inc. All Rights Reserved

SUGGESTED SHELF STORAGE PATTERN—ORGANIC

ORGANIC #2 Alcohols, Glycols, Sugars, Amines, Amides, Imines, Imides (Store flammables in a dedicated cabinet.)

ORGANIC #8 Phenols, Cresols

ORGANIC #3 Hydrocarbons, Oils, Esters, Aldehydes (Store flammables in a dedicated cabinet.)

ORGANIC #6 Peroxides, Azides, Hydroperoxides

ORGANIC #4 Ethers, Ketones, Ketenes, Halogenated Hydrocarbons, Ethylene Oxide (Store flammables in a dedicated cabinet.)

ORGANIC #1 Acids, Amino Acids, Anhydrides, Peracids (Store certain organic acids in acid cabinet.)

ORGANIC #9 Dyes, Stains, Indicators (Store alcohol-based solutions in flammables cabinet.)

ORGANIC #5 Epoxy Compounds, Isocyanates

ORGANIC #7 Sulfides, Polysulfides, etc.

MISCELLANEOUS

If possible avoid using the floor.

ORGANIC #2 Alcohols, Glycols, etc.

Maximize Storage Space

ORGANIC #3 Hydrocarbons, etc. ORGANIC #4 Ethers, Ketones, etc. ORGANIC #9 Alcohol-based Indicators, etc.

Store severe poisons in locked Poisons Cabinet.

If shelf space is a problem, you are permitted to place more than one compatible chemical family on a shelf. Make sure you either have a physical divider or leave a 3" space between each family. This will maximize your tight shelf space while keeping each compatible chemical family separate from one another.

See page 1074 for complete instructions on organizing your chemical stores area.

© 2008 Flinn Scientific, Inc. All Rights Reserved

MODEL CHEMICAL STORES AREA Please compare your facility to this model.

 Never store chemicals in a fume hood.  No chemicals routinely stored in classrooms.  VARIOUS SCIENCE DEPARTMENTS (chemistry, biology) should store their chemicals in one dedicated area.

Perpetual Chemical Inventory System.

Non-reactive (plastic) waste receptacles.

Ceiling-mounted smoke detector(s).

At least two (2) Type ABC, 15-pound, portable, wall- mounted fire extinguishers. One located at the far interior of the stores area; the second located near the door. Shelving or cabinets firmly secured to walls to prevent “pull over.” All chemical products arranged on shelves in chemically-compatible families. Some categories of products (flammables, corrosives, etc.) isolated from all other products in their own Interior walls should be of continuous floor to ceiling masonry construction. A false ceiling may enable fire or toxic fumes to easily flow to other portions of the building. Insist that your chemicals (wherever possible) be supplied in plastic or metal containers rather than less safe glass. Compressed gas cylinders firmly chained to wall in an upright position. Ventilation system isolated from rest of building; room temperature well below 25 ° C; room air changed four times per hour. Shelves equipped with “anti-roll-off lips” to prevent tipped containers from cascading to the floor.

NFPA/OSHA-approved wooden flammables cabinet.

Chemical Stores Area isolated from building ventilation system.

Posted school safety policy (student contract).

Eyewash/face drench station plumbed into potable water supply. Portable or squeeze bottle eyewashes not considered satisfactory!

Sink

Chemical First Aid Kit.

Telephone available for emergency use with emergency numbers posted alongside.

Secure door lock (dead bolt variety). Student access not allowed. Wall-mounted, woolen fire blanket

25-pound pail of dry sand for spill containment/absorption.

25-pound pail of neutralizer chemical for hazardous liquid spills.

Inexpensive, automatic, ceiling-suspended fire sprinkler system.

Door(s) to stores area (as well as individual cabinet doors) should be placarded (labeled) to identify hazardous contents. This is done to alert and protect firefighters.

Solid core door (preferably no glass windows). Ideally,

the room should have two doors.

Store no chemicals on the floor. Floor covering should be of least reactive materials.

SHELVING/CABINETS preferably of wooden construction firmly secured to walls and floor.

Self-closing door return to ensure containment of fire or fumes. At least two (2) Type ABC, 15-pound, portable, wall- mounted fire extinguishers. One located at the far interior of the stores area; the second located near the door. Supply of spill containment/ absorbent materials available for emergency. Spill treatment kits not considered satisfactory.

Outside Wall

DEDICATED, wooden, polypropylene-lined acid cabinet for acid

Ceiling-mounted smoke detector(s)

Non-reactive (plastic) waste receptacles.

Scale 1/2  = 1  -0 

© 2008 Flinn Scientific, Inc. All Rights Reserved

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