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35 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
- 3rd side (hint)
Materials that can REACT or ignite if they are exposed to AIR and the potential for container failure due to over pressurization exists.
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Air Reactivity
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Produce disease and are living micro-organisms that can mutate and become more deadly.
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Biological Agents and Toxins
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Temperature at which the transition from a liquid to a gas state occurs AT THE SURFACE.
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Boiling Point
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Used to CONTROL the rate of a chemical reaction by speeding or slowing it down.
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Catalyst
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Caused when two or more chemicals, or the chemical and its container are INCOMPATIBLE.
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Chemical Interaction
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REACTIONS are caused by both elements ad compounds to make new substances with their own physical and chemical properties.
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Chemical Reactions
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Describes a substance's propensity to release energy or undergo change.
Example: Self-reaction, polymerization. |
Chemical Reactivity
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The ability for a chemical to create a reaction.
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Separate elements that bond together to form compound MIXTURE.
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Compound Mixture
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The amount of acid or base is compared to the amount of water present.
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Concentration
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Indicates the concentration of HYDROGEN IONS in the material being tested.
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Corrosivity
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Heat absorbing/Heat Producing
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Endothermic/Exothermic
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Endo - IN
Exo - OUT |
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Often more toxic than naturally occuring organic chemicals. They decompose into SMALLER, more harmful elements when exposed to high temperatures for long periods of time.
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Halogenated Hydrocarbons
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Minimum temperature to which a material must be raised before it will ignite.
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Auto-Ignition/Ignition Temperature
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IGNITE.
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Controls chemical reaction.
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Inhibitor
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Inhibit - limit, block, or decrease the action or function of; "inhibit the action of the enzyme"; "inhibit the rate of a chemical reaction"
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The MAXIMUM STORAGE TEMPERATURE that an organic peroxide may be stored safely.
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Maximum Safe Storage Temperature
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MSST
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Tendency or ABILITY of two or more liquids to form a UNIFORM BLEND or DISSOLVE in each other.
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Miscibility
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The NUMERICAL MEASURE of a solution's hydrogen ion concentration in relation to its ACIDITY or alkalinity.
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pH
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1-7: acid
7: neutral 7-14: base |
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Materials in which carbon atoms are linked by only SINGLE covalent bonds.
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Saturated Hydrocarbons
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S-S
Single :: Saturated |
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At least one multiple bond between two carbon atoms somewhere in the molecule, which causes them to be more hazardous.
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Unsaturated Hydrocarbon
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Contain the benzene "ring" which is formed by six carbon atoms and contains double bonds. Its greatest hazard is Toxicity.
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Aromatic Hydrocarbons.
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Pourable mixture of a solid and liquid.
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Slurry
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The ability of a substance to change from the solid to the vapor phase without passing through the liquid phase.
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Sublimation
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These agents are extremely toxic.
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Blister Agents
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it starts with a V!
=] |
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Ease with which a liquid or solid can pass into the vapor state.
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Volatility
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Vapors are Volatile
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Causes the death of 50% of a group of test animals by any route other than inhalation.
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LD 50
Lethal Dose |
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AMOUNT of material in air that is expected to kill 50% of a group of test animals by inhalation over a specific time period.
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LC 50
Lethal Concentration |
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OSHA term for the maximum concentration averaged over 8 hours to which 95% of healthy adults can be repeatedly exposed for 8hr/day - 40hrs/week
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PEL
Permissible Exposure Limit |
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American Conference of Governmental Industrial Hygienists
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TLV - TWA
Time Weighted Average |
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Maximum average concentration where exposure should not occur more than four times a day.
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TLV - STEL
Short-Term Exposure Limit |
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Maximum concentration where exposure causes no risk of injury and the exposure to higher concentrations should not occur.
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TLC - C
Ceiling |
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Maximum level where a worker can be exposed for 30 minutes and escape without suffering irreversible health effects of impairment.
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IDLH
Immediately Dangerous to Life and Health Value |
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BASIC IDENTIFICATION TOOLS:
NERVE AGENTS |
1. Colormetric Tubes
2. M18a2 Chemical Detection Kit 3. ICAM 4. Detection Paper (m8-m9 paper) 5. Enzyme Tickets (m256 Kit) 6. Infrared Spectrometry 7. Ion-Mobility Spectrometry 8. Photo-Ionization Detector (PID) |
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BASIC IDENTIFICATION TOOLS: BLISTER AGENTS
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1. Colormetric Tubes
2. M18a2 Chemical Detection Kit 3. ICAM 4. Detection Paper (m8-m9 paper) 5. Enzyme Tickets (m256 Kit) 6. Infrared Spectrometry 7. Ion-Mobility Spectrometry 8. Photo-Ionization Detector (PID) |
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Can not be detected with air monitoring devices
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BASIC IDENTIFICATION TOOLS: IRRITANTS
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Steps in an analysis process for identifying UNKNOWN solid and liquid materials.
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Rachel - Radioactivity
Came - Corrosives Over - Oxygen Availability/Deficiency Pulled - pH Her - Hydrogen Sulfide Coat - Carbon Monoxide Off - Organic vapors |
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