Understanding MSDS
& RDS
Material Safety
Data Sheet
Product Identification
This section gives the name and address of the manufacturer and an emergency phone
number where questions about toxicity and chemical hazards can be directed.
Product Name: Commercial or marketing name.
Synonym: Approved chemical name and/or synonyms.
Chemical Family: Group of chemicals with related physical and chemical
properties.
Formula: Chemical formula, if applicable; i.e., the conventional scientific
definition for a material.
CAS Number: Number assigned to chemicals or
materials by the Chemical Abstracts Service.
Hazardous Ingredients Of Mixtures
This section describes the percent composition of the substance, listing chemicals
present in the mixture. If it was tested as a mixture, lists chemicals which contribute to
its hazardous nature. Otherwise, lists ingredients making up more than 1% and all
carcinogens.
The OSHA , permissible exposure level (PEL),
National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) recommended
exposure limit (REL), and/or the American Conference of Governmental Industrial
Hygienists (ACGIH) threshold limit value (TLV) will
also be listed, if appropriate.
The OSHA PEL is the regulated standard, while the others are recommended limits. The
PEL is usually expressed in parts per million parts of air (ppm) or milligrams of dust or
vapor per cubic meter of air (mg/m3). It is usually a time
weighted average (TWA) - concentration averaged over an eight hour day.
Sometimes, a STEL or short term exposure limit may be
listed. The STEL is a 15 minute TWA which should not be exceeded. A ceiling limit (c), is a concentration which may not be exceeded
at any time. A skin notation means that skin exposure
is significant in contributing to the overall exposure.
Physical Data
This section outlines the physical properties of the material. The information may be
used to determine conditions for exposure. For example, one can determine whether or not a
chemical will form a vapor (vapor pressure), whether this vapor will rise or fall (vapor
density), and what the vapor should smell like (appearance and odor). This could help
determine whether to use a fume hood or where to place ventilators. The following
information is usually included:
Boiling Point: temperature at which liquid changes to vapor state
Melting Point: temperature at which a solid begins to change to liquid
Vapor Pressure: a measure of how volatile a substance is and how quickly it
evaporates. For comparison, the VP of water (at 20o C) is 17.5 mm Hg, Vaseline
(non-volatile) is close to 0 mm Hg, and diethyl ether (very volatile) is 440 mm Hg.
Vapor Density (air=1): weight of a gas or vapor compared to weight of an
equal volume of air. Density greater than 1 indicates it is heavier than air, less than 1
indicates it is lighter than air. Vapors heavier than air can flow along just above
ground, where they may pose a fire or explosion hazard. Specific Gravity (water=1):
ratio of volume weight of material to equal volume weight of water. Solubility in
Water: percentage of material that will dissolve in water, usually at ambient
temperature. Since the much of the human body is made of water, water soluble substances
more readily absorb and distribute.
Appearance/Odor: color, physical state at room temperature, size of
particles, consistency, odor, as compared to common substances. Odor threshold refers to
the concentration required in the air before vapors are detected or recognized.
% Volatile by Volume: Percentage of a liquid or solid, by volume, that
evaporates at a temperature of 70oF.
Evaporation Rate: usually expressed as a time ratio with ethyl ether = 1,
unless otherwise specified.
Viscosity: internal resistance to flow exhibited by a fluid, normally
measured in centiStoke time or Saybolt Universal Secs.
Other Pertinent Physical Data: information such as freezing point is given,
as appropriate.
Fire And Explosion Hazard Data
This section includes information regarding the flammability of the material and
information for fighting fires involving the material.
Flashpoint: the lowest temperature at which a liquid gives off enough
vapor to ignite when a source of ignition is present.
Autoignition Temperature: the approximate temperature at which a flammable
gas-air mixture will ignite without spark or flame. Vapors and gases will spontaneously
ignite at lower temperatures in oxygen than in air.
Flammable Limits: the lower explosive limit (LEL) and upper explosive limit
(UEL) define the range of concentration of a gas or vapor in air at which combustion can
occur. For instance, an automobile carburetor controls this mixture - too lean (not enough
chemical) or too rich (not enough air, as when you flood your engine), will not ignite.
Extinguishing Media: appropriate extinguishing agent(s) for the material.
Fire-fighting Procedures: Appropriate equipment and methods are indicated
for limiting hazards encountered in fire situations.
Fire or Explosion Hazards: Hazards and/or conditions which may cause fire or
explosions are defined.
Health Hazard Data
This section defines the medical signs and symptoms that may be encountered with normal
exposure or overexposure to this material or its components. Information on the toxicity
of the substance may also be presented. Results of animal studies are most often given.
i.e. LD50 (mouse)=250 mg/kg. Usually expressed in weight of chemical per kg of body
weight. LD50 or lethal dose
50 is the dose of a substance which will cause the death of half the
experimental animals. LC50 is the concentration of the
substance in air which will cause the death of half the experimental animals.
Health hazard information may also distinguish the effects of acute (short term) and
chronic (long-term) exposure.
Emergency And First Aid Procedures
Based on the toxicity of the product, degree of exposure and route of contact (eye,
skin, inhalation, ingestion, injection), emergency and first aid procedures are
recommended in this section. Additional cautionary statements, i.e., Note to Physician,
for first aid procedures, when necessary, will also appear here.
Reactivity Data
This section includes information regarding the stability of the material and any
special storage or use considerations.
Stability: "unstable" indicates that a chemical may decompose
spontaneously under normal temperatures, pressures, and mechanical shocks. Rapid
decomposition produces heat and may cause fire or explosion. Conditions to avoid are
listed in this section.
Incompatibility: certain chemicals, when mixed may create hazardous
conditions. Incompatible chemicals should not be stored together.
Hazardous Decomposition Products: chemical substances which may be created
when the chemical decomposes or burns.
Hazardous Polymerization: rapid polymerization may produce enough heat to
cause containers to explode. Conditions to avoid are listed in this section.
Spill, Leak And Disposal Procedures
This section outlines general procedures, precautions and methods for cleanup of
spills. Appropriate waste disposal methods are provided for safety and environmental
protection.
Personal Protection Information
This section includes general information about appropriate personal protective
equipment for handling this material. Many times, this section of the MSDS is written for
large scale use of the material. Appropriate personal protection may be determined by
considering the amount of the material being used and the actual manipulations to be
performed.
Eye Protection: recommendations are dependent upon the irritancy,
corrosivity, and special handling procedures.
Skin Protection: describes the particular types of protective garments and
appropriate glove materials to provide personnel protection.
Respiratory Protection: appropriate respirators for conditions exceeding the
recommended occupational exposure limits.
Ventilation: air flow schemes (general, local) are listed to limit hazardous
substances in the atmosphere.
Reference Data Sheet For
Hazardous Chemicals,
Hazardous Materials, And Hazardous Waste
POTENTIAL PROBLEM AREAS
| Classification
for:
|
 | Preparation of shipping papers/manifests |
 | Segregation of materials in storage and transportation |
 | Contingency planning/emergency response |
 | Proper labeling and marking |
 | Agency reporting requirements |
|
 | Training of employees |
 | Remediation of contamination |
 | Employee health and safety |
 | Transportation safety |
 | Environmental/public health protection |
|
REGULATORY AGENCIES AND
RESPONSIBILITIES:
- The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA)
Implementing agency for the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970
(OSHA); responsible for codification and enforcement of regulations to
protect employees in certain workplaces.
- The Department of Transportation (DOT)
Implementing agency for the Hazardous Materials Transportation Act of 1975 (HMTA)
and the Hazardous Materials Transportation Uniform Safety Act of 1990 (HMTUSA);
responsible for codification and enforcement of regulations to ensure safe
transportation of materials in commerce.
- The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
Implementing Agency for several environmental acts; responsible for
codification and enforcement of regulations to protect both human health and
the environment.
IMPLICATIONS:
Regulatory agencies have received different Congressional mandates as to
their function. Similar terminology may be used by each agency (e.g.,
"hazardous chemicals," "hazardous substances,"
"hazardous materials," "hazardous waste"), but the terms are
not necessarily interchangeable. Each agency defines a term on the basis of the
agency's mandate. For example, "hazardous waste" as referred by OSHA
will relate to employee health and safety protection (protection relative to
employee exposure to a health hazard or physical hazard); DOT will relate
to safe transportation of the waste as a material (packaging/labeling, emergency
response information in case of an accident during transportation, preparation
of shipping papers, releases during transportation); and, EPA will relate
to protection of the environment (releases into the environment) and public
health (minimizing a population exposure to an adverse health hazard).
Therefore, each term may have unique applications and should only be used in
accordance with the proper regulatory function.
Terminology:
OSHA:
Hazardous substance - "any substance designated or listed under
paragraphs (A) through (D) of this definition, exposure to which results or may
result in adverse effects on the health or safety of employees:
- Any substance defined under section 101(14) of CERCLA;
- Any biological agent and other disease-causing agent which after release
into the environment and upon exposure, ingestion, inhalation, or
assimilation into any person, either directly...or indirectly... , will or
may reasonably be anticipated to cause death, disease, behavioral
abnormalities, cancer genetic mutation, physiological malfunctions or
physical deformations in such persons or their offspring;
- Any substance listed by the U.S. Department of Transportation as hazardous
materials under 49 CFR 172.101 and appendices; and,
- Hazardous waste as herein defined." {29 CFR 1910.120(a)(3)}
Hazardous waste - "a waste or combination of wastes as defined in
40 CFR 261.3, or those substances identified as hazardous wastes in 49 CFR
171.8." {29 CFR 1910.120(A)(3)}
Hazardous chemical - "any chemical which is a physical or a
health hazard." {29 CFR 1910.1200(c)}
Health hazard - "a chemical for which there is statistically
significant evidence based on at least one study conducted in accordance with
established scientific principles that acute or chronic health effects may occur
in exposed employees. ...includes...carcinogens, toxic or highly toxic agents,
reproductive toxins, irritants, corrosives, sensitizers, hepatotoxins,
nephrotoxins, neurotoxins, agents which act on the hematopoietic system, and
agents which damage the lungs, skin, eyes, or mucous membrane." {29 CFR
1910.1200(c)}
Corrosive - "a chemical that causes visible destruction of, or
irreversible alterations in, living tissue by chemical action at the site of
contact. For example, a chemical is considered to be corrosive if, when tested
on the intact skin of albino rabbits by the method described by the U.S. DOT in
Appendix A to 49 CFR Part 173, it destroys or changes irreversibly the structure
of the tissue at the site of contact following an exposure period of four hours.
This term shall not refer to action on inanimate surfaces." {29 CFR
1910.1200 Appendix A}
Highly toxic - "a chemical falling within any of the following
categories:
- ...has a median lethal dose (LD50) of 50 milligrams or less per kilogram
of body weight when administered orally to albino rats weighing between 200
and 300 grams each.
- ...has a median lethal dose (LD50) of 200 milligrams or less per kilogram
of body weight when administered by continuous contact for 24 hours (or less
if death occurs within 24 hours) with bare skin of albino rabbits weighing
between two and three kilograms each.
- ...has a median lethal concentration (LC50) in air of 200 parts per
million by volume or less of gas or vapor, or 2 milligrams per liter or less
of mist, fume, or dust, when administered by continuous inhalation but not
more than 1000 milligrams per kilogram of body weight when administered by
continuous contact for 24 hours (or less if death occurs within 24 hours)
with bare skin of albino rabbits weighing between two and three kilograms
each.
- has a median lethal concentration (LC50) in air of more than 200 parts per
million but not more than 2000 parts per million by volume of gas or vapor,
or more than 2 milligrams per liter but not more than 20 milligrams per
liter of mist, fume, or dust, when administered by continuous inhalation for
one hour (or less if death occurs within one hour) to albino rats weighing
between 200 and 300 grams each." {29 CFR 1910.1200 Appendix A}
Combustible liquid - "any liquid having a flash point at or above
100 °F, but below 200 °F, except any mixture having components with flash
points of 200 °F or higher, the total volume of which make up 99% or more of
the total volume of the mixture." {29 CFR 1910.1200(c)}
Explosive - "...causes a sudden almost instantaneous release of
pressure, gas, and heat when subjected to sudden shock, pressure, or high
temperature." {29 CFR 1910.1200(c)}
Flammable - "a chemical that falls into one of the following
categories:
- Aerosol, flammable - an aerosol that, when tested by the test method
described in 16 CFR 1500.45, yields a flame projection exceeding 18 inches
at full valve opening...;
- Gas, flammable -
- at ambient temperature and pressure, forms a flammable mixture with
air at a concentration of 13% by volume or less;
- at ambient temperature and pressure, forms a range of flammable
mixtures with air wider than 12% by volume,...;
- Liquid, flammable - any liquid having a flash point below 100 °F,
except...;
- Solid, flammable - a solid, other than a blasting agent or explosive as
defined in 29 CFR1910.109(a), that is liable to cause fire through friction,
absorption of moisture, spontaneous chemical change, or retained heat from
manufacturing or processing, or which can be ignited readily and when
ignited burns so vigorously and persistently as to create a serious
hazard..." {29 CFR 1910.1200(c)}
Oxidizer - "...initiates or promotes combustion in other
materials, thereby causing fire either of itself or through the release of
oxygen or other gases." {29 CFR 1910.1200(c)}
Pyrophoric - "...will ignite spontaneously in air at a
temperature of 130 °F or below." {29 CFR 1910.1200(c)}
Unstable (reactive) - "...will vigorously polymerize, decompose,
condense, or will become self-reactive under conditions of shocks, pressure, or
temperature." {29 CFR 1910.1200(c)}
Water-reactive - "...reacts with water to release a gas that is
either flammable or presents a health hazard." {29 CFR 1910.1200(c)}
DOT:
Hazardous material - "a substance or material, including a hazardous
substance, which has been determined by the Secretary of Transportation to be
capable of posing an unreasonable risk to health, safety, and property when
transported in commerce, and has been so designated." {49 CFR 171.8}
Explosive - "any substance or article, including a device, which
is designed to function by explosion (i.e., an extremely rapid release of gas
and heat) or which, by chemical reaction within itself, is able to function in a
similar manner even if not designed to function by explosion, ..." {49 CFR
173.50}
Flammable gas - "any material which is a gas at 68 °F or less
and 14.7 psi of pressure (a material which has a boiling point of 68 °F or less
at 14.7 psi) which has:
- Ignition at 14.7 psi when in a mixture of 13% or less by volume with air;
or
- Flammable range at 14.7 psi with air of at least 12% regardless of the
lower limit." {49 CFR 173.115}
Flammable Liquid - "a liquid having a flash point of not more
than 141 °F, or any material in a liquid phase with a flash point at or above
100 °F ...with the following exceptions:
- Any liquid meeting one of the definitions specified in §173.115 of this
part;
- Any mixture having one or more components with a flash point of 141 °F or
higher, that makes up at least 99% of the total [mixture] volume, if the
mixture is not offered for transportation..." {49 CFR 173.120}
Combustible liquid - "...has a flash point above 141 °F and
below 200 °F. A flammable liquid with a flash point at or above 100 °F that
does not meet the definition of any other hazard class may be reclassed as a
combustible liquid." {49 CFR 173.120}
Flammable solid - "any of the following three types of materials:
- Wetted explosives that -
- When dry are explosives of Class 1 other than those of compatibility
group A, which are wetted with sufficient water, alcohol, or plasticizer
to suppress explosive properties; and,
- Are named either in the §172.101 Table or have been assigned a
shipping name and hazard class by the Associate Administrator for
Hazardous Materials Safety under the provisions of -
- An exemption issued under subchapter B of this chapter; or,
- An approval issued under §173.56(i) of this part.
- Self-reactive materials that are liable to undergo, at normal or elevated
temperatures, a strongly exothermic decomposition caused by excessively high
transport temperatures or by contamination; and,
- Readily combustible solids that -
- Are solids which may cause a fire through friction, such as matches;
- Show a burning rate faster than 0.087 inches per second...; or,
- Any metal powders that can be ignited and react over the whole length
of a sample in 10 minutes or less..." {49 CFR 173.124}
Spontaneously combustible material - "A pyrophoric material is a
liquid or solid that, even in small quantities and without an external ignition
source, can ignite within five minutes after coming into contact with air...;
A self-heating material is a material that, when in contact with air and without
an energy supply, is liable to self-heat..." {49 CFR 173.124}
Dangerous when wet material - "...by contact with water, is
liable to become spontaneously flammable or to give off flammable or toxic gas
at a rate greater than 1 liter per kilogram of the material per hour..."
{49 CFR 173.124}
Oxidizer - "...may by yielding oxygen, cause or enhance the
combustion of other materials." {49 CFR 173.127}
Poisonous material - "a material, other than a gas, which is
known to be so toxic to humans as to afford a hazard to health during
transportation, or which, in the absence of adequate data on human toxicity:
- falls within any one of the following categories when tested on laboratory
animals:
- Oral Toxicity. A liquid with an LD50 for acute oral toxicity of not
more than 500 mg/kg or a solid with an LD50 for acute oral toxicity of
not more than 200 mg/kg.
- Dermal Toxicity. A material with an LD50 for acute dermal toxicity of
not more than 1000 mg/kg.
- Inhalation Toxicity. A dust or mist with an LC50 for acute toxicity on
inhalation of not more than 10 mg/L; a material with a saturated vapor
concentration in air at 68 ° F of more than one-fifth of the LC50 for
acute toxicity on inhalation of vapors and with an LC50 for acute
toxicity on inhalation of vapors of not more than 5000 mg/m3;
or,
- causes extreme irritation, especially in confined spaces." {49 CFR
173.132}
Corrosive material - "a liquid or a solid that causes visible
destruction or irreversible alterations in human skin tissue at the site of
contact, or a liquid that has a severe corrosion rate on steel or aluminum, in
accordance with the following criteria:
- A material is considered to be destructive or cause irreversible
alteration in human skin tissue if, when tested on the intact skin of an
albino rabbit...the structure of the tissue at the site of contact is
destroyed or changed irreversibly after an exposure period of 4 hours or
less.
- A liquid...if its corrosion rate exceeds 0.246 inches a year on steel or
aluminum at a test temperature of 131 °F. An acceptable test method is
described in NACE Standard TM-01-69." {49 CFR 173.136}
Miscellaneous hazardous material - "a material which presents a
hazard during transportation but which does not meet the definition of any other
hazard class. This class includes:
- [Materials having] an anesthetic, noxious or other similar property which
could cause extreme annoyance or discomfort to a flight crew member so as to
prevent...performance of...duties; or,
- [Materials meeting] the definition in §171.8 of this subchapter for an
elevated temperature material, a hazardous substance, or a hazardous
waste." {49 CFR 173.140}
Hazardous substance - "a material, including its mixtures and
solutions, that -
- Is listed in the appendix to §172.101 of this subchapter;
- Is in a quantity, in one package, which equals or exceeds the reportable
quantity (RQ) listed in the appendix to §172.101 of this subchapter; and,
- When in a mixture or solution -
- For radionuclides, conforms to paragraph 6 of the appendix to
§172.101 of this subchapter.
- For other than radionuclides, is in a concentration by weight which
equals or exceeds the concentration corresponding to the RQ of the
material, as shown in the following table:
| RQ
pounds (kilograms)
| Concentration
by Weight
|
| Percent
| PPM
|
5000 (2270)
1000 (454)
100 (45.4)
10 (4.54)
1 (0.454)
| 10
2
0.2
0.02
0.002
| 100,000
20,000
2,000
200
20
|
This definition does not apply to petroleum products that are lubricants
or fuels." {49 CFR 171.8}
Hazardous waste - "any material that is subject to the Hazardous
Waste Manifest Requirements of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
specified in 40 CFR Part 262." {49 CFR 171.8}
EPA:
Solid waste - "any discarded material that is not excluded by 40 CFR
261.4(a) or that is not excluded by a variance under §§ 260.30 and
260.31." (A "discarded material" is an abandoned, recycled, or
inherently wastelike material as defined by the EPA.) {40 CFR 261.2}
Hazardous substance - "any substance designated pursuant to 40
CFR Part 302." Listed hazardous substances are the elements, compounds, and
hazardous wastes appearing in Table 302.4. Unlisted hazardous substances include
solid wastes, which are not excluded from regulation as hazardous wastes under
40 CFR 261.4(b), if they exhibit any of the characteristics identified in 40 CFR
261.20 through 261.24. The statutory source for designating a hazardous
substance may be the Clean Water Act, the Clean Air Act, and/or the Resource,
Conservation and Recovery Act. Hazardous substances are associated with
"Reportable Quantities (RQ)" which are that quantity of a hazardous
substance the release of which within a 24-hour period requires immediate
notification to the National Response Center. {40 CFR 302}
Hazardous waste - a solid waste, as defined in §261.2, which:
- Is not excluded from regulation as a hazardous waste under §261.4(b);
and,
- Meets any of the following criteria:
- Exhibits any of the characteristics in 40 CFR Part 261, Subpart C
(ignitability, corrosivity, reactivity, and toxicity);
- Is listed in 40 CFR Part 261, Subpart D {hazardous wastes from
non-specific sources (the "F-codes") hazardous wastes from
specific sources (the "K- codes"); discarded commercial
chemical products, off-specification species, container residues, and
spill residues thereof (the acute hazardous wastes or
"P-codes" and the toxic wastes or "U-codes")}; or,
- Is a mixture with one or more listed hazardous wastes.*
* The "mixture" and "derived-from" rules were
struck down in the case of Shell Oil Company vs. EPA, District of
Columbia Court of Appeals, 1991. EPA is expected to propose the
"Hazardous Waste Identification Rule" (HWIR), which is likely
to restructure the methodology used for defining hazardous waste.
Ignitability - "...a representative sample of the waste has any
of the following properties:
- It is a liquid, other than an aqueous solution containing less than 24%
alcohol by volume and has a flash point less than 140 °F, as determined by
a Pensky-Martens Closed Cup Tester, using the test method specified in ASTM
Standard D-93-79 or D-93-80, or a Setaflash Closed Cup Tester, using the
test method specified in ASTM Standard D-3278-78, or as determined by an
equivalent test method...;
- It is not a liquid and is capable, under standard temperature and
pressure, of causing fire throughfriction, absorption of moisture or
spontaneous chemical changes and, when ignited, burns so vigorously and
persistently that it creates a hazard;
- It is an ignitable compressed gas as defined [by the DOT] and as
determined by [regulatory or equiva- lent] test methods...;
- It is an oxidizer as defined [by the DOT]." The characteristic of
ignitability has the EPA Hazardous Waste Number of D001. {40 CFR 262.21}
Corrosivity - "...a representative sample of the waste has either
of the following properties:
- It is aqueous and has a pH less than or equal to 2 or greater than 12.5,
as determined by a pH meter using either an EPA test method or an equivalent
test method...;
- It is a liquid and corrodes steel at a rate greater than 0.250 inches per
year at a test temperature of 130 °F ..." The characteristic of
corrosivity has the EPA Hazardous Waste Number of D002. {40 CFR 261.22}
Reactivity - "...a representative sample of the waste has any of
the following properties:
- It is normally unstable and readily undergoes violent change without
detonating;
- It reacts violently with water;
- It forms a potentially explosive mixture with water;
- When mixed with water, it generates toxic gases, vapors, or fumes in a
quantity sufficient to present a danger to human health or the environment;
- It is a cyanide or sulfide bearing waste which, when exposed to pH
conditions between 2 and 12.5, can generate toxic gases, vapors, or fumes in
a quantity sufficient to present a danger to human health...;
- It is capable of detonation...if subjected to a strong initiating source
or if heated under confinement;
- It is readily capable of detonating...or reaction at standard temperature
and pressure;
- It is a forbidden explosive..." The characteristic of reactivity has
the EPA Hazardous Waste Number D003. {40 CFR 261.23}
Toxicity - "A solid waste exhibits [toxicity] if...the extract
from a representative sample of the waste contains any of the contaminants
listed in [40 CFR 262.24 Table 1] at the concentration equal to or greater than
the respective value given in that table. Where the waste contains less than
0.5% filterable solids, the waste itself, after filtering..., is considered to
be the extract for the purposes of this section." {40 CFR 262.24}
IMPLICATIONS:
Reportable quantity values and reporting regulations differ according to the
defining agency. The DOT requires reporting if a reportable quantity is released
from a single container; EPA requires reporting if a reportable quantity occurs
within a 24-hour period.
Agency classifications of hazardous wastes, hazardous substances, hazardous
materials, and hazardous chemicals may also appear to conflict when comparison
is made between regulatory agencies. Several examples of this apparent conflict
may exist, including:
- Differences in EPA's definition of ignitable, the OSHA definition of
flammable, and the DOT definitions of flammable and combustible. For
example, a liquid with a flash point of:
- 90 °F may be considered EPA ignitable, OSHA flammable, and DOT
flammable;
- 110 °F may be considered EPA ignitable, OSHA combustible, and DOT
flammable or a DOT combustible liquid (if a DOT flammable liquid has a
flash point at or above 100 °F, and the liquid does not meet the
definition of any other DOT hazard class, it may be reclassed as a
combustible liquid).
- 150 °F may be considered a DOT and OSHA flammable, but is not EPA
ignitable.
- Anhydrous aluminum chloride may be classified as a corrosive hazardous
material; a corrosive and reactive hazardous chemical; a corrosive (D002)
and primarily reactive (D003) hazardous waste; and, is not specifically
listed (by name) as a hazardous substance by EPA or DOT.
- Acetyl chloride may be classified as a flammable hazardous material; a
flammable, corrosive, and/or reactive hazardous chemical; a reactive (D003),
corrosive (D002), as well as toxic (U006) hazardous waste; and, is a
specifically listed hazardous substance.
- Within the EPA hazardous waste classification system, a particular solid
waste may have several possible EPA Hazardous Waste Numbers. For example:
- A solid waste exhibiting the characteristic of toxicity for
tetrachloroethylene has the EPA Hazardous Waste Number D039;
- Tetrachloroethylene as a spent solvent used in degreasing has the EPA
Hazardous Waste Number F001;
- Tetrachloroethylene as a spent solvent has the EPA Hazardous Waste
Number F005;
- Column bottoms or heavy ends from the combined production of
trichloroethylene and tetrachloroethylene have the EPA Hazardous Waste
Number K030;
- A bottle of tetrachloroethylene as a commercial chemical product being
disposed has the EPA Hazardous Waste Number U210.
| This is not a
Material Safety Data Sheet but rather a Reference Data Sheet that has
been compiled from a number of sources, and is intended to be a concise,
relatively non-technical source of information on a particular material
or category of materials. It is provided in good faith and is believed
to be correct as of the date compiled; however, Refrigeration
Technologies makes no representation as to the comprehensiveness or
accuracy of the information. It is expected that individuals receiving
the information will exercise their independent judgment in determining
its appropriateness for a particular purpose. Accordingly, Refrigeration
Technologies will not be responsible for damages of any kind resulting
from the use of or reliance upon such information.
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