| |
Back Figure 1-8B.—Material Safety Data Sheet (back). | Up Steelworker Volume 02 - Building manual for how to work with steel | Next Hazardous Materials Storage |
Figure 1-9.Hazardous Code Chart.
The four specific hazards that the labels are
designed to illustrate are as follows:
Health Hazardthe ability of a material to either
directly or indirectly cause temporary or permanent
injury or incapacitation.
Fire Hazardthe ability of a material to bum
when exposed to a heat source.
Reactivity Hazardthe ability of a material to
release energy when in contact with water. This term
can be defined as the tendency of a material, when in
its pure state or as a commercially produced product,
to polymerize, decompose, condense, or otherwise
become self-reactive and undergo violent chemical
changes.
Specific Hazardthis term relates to a special
hazard concerning the particular product or
chemical that was not covered by other labeled
hazard items.
The degree of hazard is expressed in numerical
codes as follows:
4 = extremely dangerous material
3 = dangerous hazard
2 = moderate hazard
1 = slight hazard
0 = no hazard
The example shown in figure 1-10 describes the
hazards of methyl ethyl ketone. Methyl ethyl ketone
is usually found mixed with paints, oils, and greases
from solvent cleaning, paint removers, adhesives, and
cleaning fluid residues. The numbers on the label
identify this chemical compound as follows:
Health Hazard 2, Hazardous
Fire Hazard 4, Flash point below 73°F,
extremely dangerous material
Reactivity 3, Shock or
dangerous material
Specific Hazard, None
heat may detonate,
Figure 1-10.Hazard warning lahel for methyl ethyl ketone.
1-16
|