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Training in Handling Hazardous Materials SDSU Microfabrication Facility

Training in Handling Hazardous Materials SDSU Microfabrication Facility. Chemical Inventory. Each Laboratory must maintain a complete, accurate and up to date chemical inventory. The inventory should include: All Chemicals Hazardous Non-hazardous Compressed Gasses. Chemical Inventory.

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Training in Handling Hazardous Materials SDSU Microfabrication Facility

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  1. Training in Handling Hazardous Materials SDSU Microfabrication Facility

  2. Chemical Inventory • Each Laboratory must maintain a complete, accurate and up to date chemical inventory. • The inventory should include: • All Chemicals • Hazardous • Non-hazardous • Compressed Gasses

  3. Chemical Inventory • When you are doing the inventory, it is a good time to discard any chemicals that are: • Expired • No longer being used • Container has been compromised, i.e. Cracked lid • Label is illegible • Submit your updated inventory to EH&S on the yearly basis.

  4. Material Safety Data Sheets - MSDS • A Material Safety Data Sheet or MSDS is information provided by the manufacturer and maintain by the employer to inform employees of the possible hazards associated with chemicals being used in their work area. It is part of a hazard communication program.

  5. Material Safety Data Sheets - MSDS • As stated in 29 CFR 1910.1200(g)(8), “the employer (Lab) shall maintain in the workplace copies of the required MSDS…and shall ensure that they are readily accessible during each work shift to employees when they are in their work area.” This can be done by: • Shared database in which all laboratory workers have access. • Stored hardcopies that are sent from the manufacturer.

  6. Material Safety Data Sheets - MSDS • Each Laboratory must maintain a current MSDS for each chemical or compound being stored or used in the laboratory. • MSDS location must be clearly marked. • Each laboratory worker need know how to use and understand MSDS’s.

  7. Chemical Id Synonyms Hazardous Ingredients PEL, TLV Physical Data Appearance and odor Fire & Explosion Data Flash-point Health Hazards Toxic, Carcinogen, etc. Physical Hazards Corrosive, Oxidizer, etc. Reactivity data Incompatibles Spill Procedures Follow MSDS directions. Special Protection Wear appropriate PPE Signs and Symptoms of Exposure Headache, Nausea, etc. MSDS Content

  8. MSDS Emergency In an emergency and you cannot retrieve an MSDS, one can be obtained by calling the 3E Company’s 24 Hour phone #: 800-451-8346 Or 760-602-8703

  9. Chemical Storage • Separate incompatible chemicals. • Separate organics from inorganic • Separate oxidizers from organics • Separate flammable liquids, acids and bases • Provide earthquake restraints for all shelving when storing chemicals or glassware.

  10. Chemical Storage • Storage container MUST be compatible with material. • Example: Metal containers cannot be used for acids and bases. • Food containers MUST NEVER BE USED!

  11. Flammable Liquids Storage • If a lab has quantities greater than 10 gallons, they must be stored in an approved flammable liquids storage cabinet. • Containers that can be shattered or punctured easily must be in secondary containment. • Do not store with acids or bases.

  12. Acids • Store in secondary containment • Cannot be stored at or above eye level. • Label cabinets “Acid” with 3” letters • Store by acid class in separate secondary containment • Organic • Inorganic • Oxidizing

  13. Common Organic Acids • Glacial Acetic Acid • Trichloroacetic • Trifluoroacetic Acid • Formic Acid • Citric Acid • Benzoic Acid • Butyric Acid • Propionic Acid

  14. Common Inorganic Acids • Hydrochloric Acid • Hydrofluoric Acid • Hydrobromic Acid • Phosphoric Acid • Chromic Acid

  15. Common Oxidizing Acids • Nitric Acid • Perchloric Acid • Sulfuric Acid

  16. Bases • Store in secondary containment • Store away from acids and solvents • Cannot be stored at or above eye level. • Label cabinets “Base” with 3” letters • Examples: • Hydroxides • Amines • Ammonia • Bleach

  17. Compressed Gasses • Must be upright and restrained • At least two chains • Separate incompatible gasses • Flammable & Oxidizing by 20 feet • Keep caps on unless in use

  18. Chemical Labeling • All containers in the laboratory must be properly labeled with the name of the material being stored in the container. This includes non-hazardous materials such as: • Full name with “no” abbreviations. • Water • Weak buffers • Methanol

  19. Chemical Labeling • Containers of hazardous materials must not only include the name of the material but also the physical and health hazards associated with the use of the material.

  20. Explosive Flammable Compressed gas Carcinogen Toxic Oxidizer Corrosive Reactive Physical Hazards

  21. Carcinogen Hepatotoxin Neurotoxin Nephrotoxin Reproductive toxin Corrosive Sensitizer Irritant Highly Toxic Toxic Health Hazards

  22. HMIS “Hazardous Materials Identification System” The HMIS rating is a color-coded, alphanumeric system which gives information about the health, flammability and reactivity of the chemical in question. The system rates a material from a minimal hazard through a serious hazard. It also recommends the appropriate personal protective equipment to be worn when handling the particular chemical.

  23. Example of HMIS

  24. HM Labeling System - Sample 3 San Diego State University5500 Campanile DriveSan Diego, CA 92182 1 0 Ethanol x x x x x

  25. HMIS Health • 0 - Minimal Hazard • Not significant risk to health. • 1 - Slight Hazard • Irritation or minor reversible injury possible. • 2 - Moderate Hazard • Temporary or minor injury may occur. •  3 - Serious Hazard • Major injury likely unless prompt action is taken and medical treatment is given. • 4 - Severe Hazard • Life-threatening, major or permanent damage may result from single or repeated over exposures.

  26. HMIS Flammability • 0 - Minimal Hazard • Materials that will not burn. Usually includes any material that will not burn in air when exposed to a temperature of 1500°F. for a period of 5 minutes • 1 - Slight Hazard • Materials that must be preheated before ignition can occur. • 2 - Moderate Hazard • Materials that must be moderately heated or exposed to relatively high ambient temperaturesbefore ignition can occur. •  3 - Serious Hazard • Materials capable of ignition under almost all ambient temperature conditions. • 4 - Severe Hazard • Materials that will rapidly or completely vaporize at atmospheric pressure and normal ambient temperatures with a flashpoint below 73°F. Materials may ignite spontaneously with air.

  27. HMIS Reactivity • 0 - Minimal Hazard • Materials that are normally stable even under fire conditions. • 1 - Slight Hazard • Materials that are normally stable but that can become unstable at elevated temperatures and pressures. • 2 - Moderate Hazard • Materials that readily undergo violent chemical change at elevated temperatures and pressures. These materials may also react violently with water. • 3 - Serious Hazard • Materials that are capable of detonation or explosive decomposition but require a strong initiating source or materials the react explosively with water. • 4 - Severe Hazard • Materials that are readily capable of detonation or explosive decomposition or explosive reaction at normal temperatures and pressures.

  28. HMIS Protective Equipment

  29. This labeling is not acceptable

  30. Exposure Routes of Exposure • Inhalation • Absorption • Ingestion • Injection

  31. Exposure Control • Prevent exposures to hazardous materials. • Inhalation – Keep containers closed, use the fume hood, reduce volumes • Absorption – Wear gloves, lab coat, safety glasses, clean up spills promptly. • Ingestion – Don’t eat, drink, smoke of apply cosmetics in the laboratory. Don’t store hazardous material in food containers. • Injection – Use care when handling sharps. Properly dispose of sharps.

  32. Exposure Control • Engineering controls: - hoods, cabinets, safety cans, trays • Work practices: - operating procedures • Personal protective equipment: - safety glasses, lab coats, gloves, no open-toed shoes

  33. Types of Emergencies • Medical emergency • Fire • Chemical spill • Biohazardous material spill • Bomb threat • Earthquake • Power outage

  34. Emergency Response • If an emergency occurs, notify: • Notify your safety officer or EH&S (X46778) and the supervisor of the area. • If after business hours, notify Public Safety (X41991).

  35. Fire Happens!

  36. Managing Hazardous Chemical Waste

  37. What is Hazardous Waste EPA Definition: A material is a hazardous waste if due to its quantity, concentration, physical, chemical or infectious characteristics it possesses a substantial present, or potential hazard to human health and the environment and has no known use.

  38. What chemical waste must be managed? Wastes that meet any of the following characteristics. • Ignitable – Flashpoint of ≤ 140°F • Corrosive – pH ≤2 or ≥ 12.5 • Toxic – LD-50 < 5000 mg/kg • Reactive – Reacts with anything

  39. Hazardous waste must not be disposed of on site. This includes Storm or Sewer Drains …The Trash Can

  40. Hazardous waste must not be disposed of on site. Especially… Through Waste Treatment!!

  41. Satellite Accumulation These are areas that generate small quantities of Hazardous Waste. This means laboratories. Definition: An Area that within 9 months accumulates- • No more than 55 gallons of any hazardous waste stream. • No more than 1 quart of any acutely or extremely hazardous waste stream.

  42. Hazardous Waste Storage This open waste containers needs a cap Poor waste labeling here as well A funnel is not a cap Good Secondary Containment Waste containers must be kept closed/capped unless waste is being added or removed! Waste must

  43. Hazardous Waste Storage • Containers with closable/sealable lids or covers. • Containers must be in good condition: no holes, creases, cracks, rust. • They must be compatible to the waste stored in it. Container open with no label

  44. Hazardous Waste Storage • No Food or Beverage Containers.

  45. Waste Labeling Label must have the words: • “Hazardous Waste” • The name and address of the generator (SDSU) • The waste composition and physical state • Percent volume • Type of Hazard, ie. Flammable, Corrosive, Toxic • The accumulation start date (Month, Day, Year) Incomplete waste label -Component label smeared -No percent volume -No hazards checked

  46. Waste Labeling In other words, fill out the entire hazardous waste label!!

  47. “Empty” Containers • > 5 gallons in size which previously held hazardous materials must be managed • < 5 gallons don’t need to be managed • Empty containers that previously held Highly toxic materials must be handled as hazardous waste, ie. “Sodium azide”.

  48. “California Empty” • Collect: • Collect in a safe location • Invert to dry: • Invert bottle over paper towels and shake to dry. (Do not air dry in fume hoods or by leaving the lid off) • Deface: • Thoroughly deface the chemical label. • Dispose: • To dispose of the bottle call EH&S.

  49. Waste Minimization Key methods for waste minimization • Reduce • Purchase only what you need • Set up experiments so that less solvent or chemicals are needed • Reuse • Reuse empty containers to collect waste • Reuse a solvents if purity is not an issue • Recycle • Some waste oils can be recycled • Some metal cables and tubing can be recycled

  50. Waste Container removal • Call EH&S Department at x46778 or x46098. • Never allow more than the maximum amounts to be accumulated. • Satellite containers will be removed within seven working days.

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