Unknown chemicals must be properly identified according to hazard class before proper disposal. The hazards that should be noted include: corrosive, ignitable, oxidizer, reactive, toxic and ...
Segregate oxidizers from all other chemicals in the laboratory. Minimize the quantities of strong oxidizers stored in the laboratory. DO NOT return excess chemicals to the original container.
Highly reactive chemicals include those that have the potential to vigorously polymerize, undergo a vigorous condensation or oxidation-reduction reaction ... reactive chemicals should be approved by ...
Recent research reveals a surprising phenomenon in atmospheric chemistry: water droplets can spontaneously produce hydroxyl ...
Contrary to popular belief, antioxidants aren’t a panacea. In fact, recent research in Science suggests that for controlling ...
Osmium Tetroxide (OsO4), a severe oxidizer, is highly poisonous even at low exposure ... of osmium tetroxide as described in Section VII (1.1.4.) of the Chemical Hygiene Plan (Laboratory Safety ...
Gainesville Fire Rescue officials say on Monday a lab tech at UF’s Leigh Hall reported an oxidizer crystalizing in its ...
For example, adding oxygen enhances some catalytic oxidation reactions (reactions that introduce oxygen into chemical ...
Every laboratory spill generates waste ... water reactive or air reactive chemicals, ignition sources, oxidizers, and significant quantities of combustible materials. Toxic vapors and dust are also ...
Two recent chemistry studies pinpoint reactions that may link the gut microbiome to the development of Parkinson's disease.
A University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign study is the first to describe an electrochemical strategy to capture, concentrate ...