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chemical management factsheet
Managing Chemical Retention and
Storage in your Laboratory
See also the
Managing
Particularly Hazardous Substances and
Peroxide Forming Chemicals
factsheets.
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INTRODUCTION
Prudent chemical retention and storage practices are vital to
maintain a safe laboratory working environment and to minimize the
financial costs and environmental impact associated with the
handling and disposal of unwanted chemicals. The American Chemical
Society endorses the "Less Is Better" (1993) approach which
emphasizes the safety and financial reasons for buying chemicals in
small packages on an as needed basis: reduced risk of breakage,
reduced risk of exposure following accidents, reduced storage costs,
reduced wasted from decomposition during prolonged storage in
partially empty bottles, and reduced disposal cost for unused
materials. For chemicals likely to be used in the near future, a
well-managed storage plan is necessary in order to reduce the risk
of incompatible chemical reactions and unwanted exposures to
particularly hazardous substances. This fact sheet focuses on proper
guidelines for chemical retention and storage.
CHEMICAL RETENTION
Temperature, humidity, light, exposure to air and other
substances are several factors that affect chemical purity and can
contribute to chemical decomposition. Decomposition can lead to the
formation of hazardous reactive chemical by-products. It may also
affect the quality of research when decomposed chemicals turn into
unknown or unintended compounds. The following are general
recommendations for chemical retention:
- The date the material was received and the date the
container was first opened should be recorded. This is
especially important to track those chemicals that degrade
rapidly and/or form explosive peroxides. Organic peroxides
are a class of compounds that have unusual stability
problems that make them among the most hazardous substances
found in the laboratory. As a class, organic peroxides are
considered to be powerful explosives and are sensitive to
heat, friction, impact, and light, a well as to strong
oxidizing and reducing agents. Please refer to the VEHS fact
sheet - “Peroxide Forming Chemicals - Chemical Retention and
Storage” for more detailed information for handling and
storage of peroxide forming chemicals available on the VEHS
website. www.safety.vanderbilt.edu• Properly dispose of any
chemicals or gas cylinders past an expiration date listed on
the label or that have been stored beyond the shelf life
recommendations given on the supplier MSDS or technical
datasheet. Submit collection request to the VEHS website at:
http://www.safety.vanderbilt.edu/resources/hazard_collection.htm.
- Properly dispose of any unlabeled chemical containers or
gas cylinders. Unlabeled chemicals are not only a danger to
lab staff but also to housekeeping and emergency personnel.
Submit collection request to the VEHS website at:
http://www.safety.vanderbilt.edu/resources/hazard_collection.htm.
- Keep a current inventory of all chemical compounds and
compressed gas cylinders in the laboratory. Vanderbilt
University uses Chemtracker for assistance with maintaining
chemical inventories. Contact VEHS for more
information regarding the use of Chemtracker (2-2057).
CHEMICAL STORAGE
FLAMMABLE LIQUID STORAGE
Flammable liquids should be stored in flammable liquid
storage cabinets or inside a designated flammable liquid storage
area. The maximum volume of flammable liquids allowed in
laboratories outside flammable liquid storage cabinets are as
follows (NFPA 45):
- 10 gallons (38 liters) of Class 1 flammable
liquids per 100 sq. ft. area. (Flash point < 100˚F)
- 20 gallons (78 liters) of Class I, II, and IIIA
flammable liquids. (Flash point > 100˚F for Class II and >
140˚F for Class IIIA).
- An additional 10 gallons of Class 1 flammable liquids
can be stored in a flammable liquid storage cabinet.
Combinations of Class 1, Class II, and Class IIIA flammable
liquids may not exceed 40 gallons in a flammable liquid
storage cabinet.
- Flammable-liquids storage cabinets are not intended for
the storage of highly toxic materials, acids, bases,
compressed gases or pyrolytic chemicals.
- The maximum quantity of flammable and combustible
liquids allowed in a properly designed and protected
flammable liquid storage room is 5 gallons (19 liters) per
square foot of floor area (NFPA 30).
- Purchase the smallest volume container needed for
research. This is especially important with glass containers
storing flammable liquids since these are highly susceptible
to breakage.
- Large bottles should be stored low to the ground in
order to prevent large spills from dropping.
STORAGE OF PARTICULARLY HAZARDOUS SUBSTANCES (PHS)
- Particularly Hazardous Substances (PHS) should be
segregated from other less hazardous chemicals in the
laboratory. PHS includes regulated substances, known
carcinogens, reproductive hazards, sensitizers, highly acute
toxins, or highly corrosive chemicals.
- For more information, refer to the VEHS Fact Sheet on
“Managing Particularly Hazardous Substances (PHS) In Your
Laboratory” available on the VEHS website.
STORAGE OF CHEMICAL HAZARDOUS WASTE
- Storage of Hazardous Waste in the Laboratory: Each lab
should have a designated location in which to store
hazardous materials to be discarded (do not keep radioactive
waste and hazardous chemical waste in the same place). This
location should be out of the way of normal lab activities,
but easily accessible and recognizable by VEHS staff.
- Refer to the Laboratory Guide for Managing Chemical
Waste available on the VEHS website.
CHEMICAL STORAGE GROUPS
Chemicals are best segregated by hazard class to avoid
incompatibilities. DO NOT STORE CHEMICALS ALPHABETICALLY, except
within a hazard class. Plastic bins can be used to provide
secondary containment and segregation on shelves. Recommended
general hazard classes for storage are listed below. Chemtracker
can assist with the designation of storage groups for particular
chemicals:
A - Compatible Organic Bases Examples: hydroxylamine,
tetramethylethylamine diamine, triethylamine, phenylhydrazine
B
- Compatible Pyrophoric & Water Reactive Materials React
with water to yield flammable or toxic gases. Examples include
sodium, potassium, metal hydrides and hydrolysable halides
(titanium tetrachloride, phosgene etc.) Keep away from water
sources. Do not store above or below sinks. Use dry chemical
extinguisher for fire.
C
- Compatible Inorganic Bases Materials with a pH > 9.
Examples include ammonium hydroxide, calcium hydroxide, and
sodium hydroxide. Separate from acids. Store solutions of
inorganic hydroxides in polyethylene containers.
D
- Compatible Organic Acids Examples: propionic acid,
trichloroacetic acid, acetic anhydride, acetyl bromide. Separate
from inorganic acids.
E
- Compatible Oxidizers including Peroxides React with
water, fire, flammables and combustibles. Examples include
inorganic nitrates (nitric acid), permanganates, inorganic
peroxides, persulfates, and perchlorates (perchloric acid). Keep
separate from flammables and other organic materials. Keep
separate from reducing agents (i.e., zinc, alkaline metals, and
formic acid). Do not store directly on wooden surfaces.
F
- Compatible Inorganic Acids not including Oxidizers or
Combustibles Materials with pH < 5. Examples include
hydrochloric and hydrofluoric acid. Separate from active metals
including sodium and potassium and from organic acids.
G
- Not intrinsically Reactive or Flammable or Combustible
Example: NaCl, buffer solutions
J*
- Poison Compressed Gases Example: Hydrogen sulfide,
chlorine
K*
- Explosive or other highly unstable materials Example:
Picric Acid, nitrocellulose
L
- Non-Reactive Flammables and Combustibles, including
solvents Flammable/Combustibles vapors ignite easily at room
temperature. Examples include alcohols, esters, ketones, ethers
and pyrophorics. Store flammable liquids in approved safety cans
or cabinets. Keep away from heat, sun, flame, and spark sources.
Separate from oxidizers. See Flammable Liquid Storage section.
X*
- Incompatible with all other storage groups
* Storage Groups J, K, and X are particularly hazardous and
are incompatible with all other storage groups, or require
special storage considerations. For assistance with these
storage groups, please contact VEHS (2-2057).

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