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Hazard divisions

Environmental Services Division Hazardous Waste Management Division... [Pg.243]

Regional Administrator Air and Toxics Division Emergency Response (24-hour) Emergency Response (Toll-free) Environmental Services Division Hazardous Waste... [Pg.245]

Regional Administrator Air and Toxics Division Hazardous Waste... [Pg.245]

Michigan State Police Motor Carrier Division, Hazardous Materials Section 4000 Collins Road Lansing Ml 48909 ... [Pg.650]

Head of Chemical Industries Division Hazardous Installations Directorate Health and Safety Executive... [Pg.246]

S. Wachtel, "Prediction of Detonation Hazards in Sohd PropeUants," paper presented at the 145th National Meeting of the Division of Fuel Chemisty, New York, 1963. [Pg.54]

Hazardous Waste Reduction Checklist and Assessment Manualfor the Metal FinishingJndusty, California Department of Health Services, Alternative Technology Division, Toxic Substances Control Program, Sacramento, Calif., 1990. [Pg.141]

Demand for thallium has decreased since the early 1980s because, wherever possible, substitute materials are used due to its hazardous nature. Annual production is very small, estimated to be 10,000 kg/yr. The principal domestic producer is Noah Chemical Division, Noah Industrial Corporation. Thallium is available in three grades 99.9%, 99.99%, and 99.999% pure. The 99.9% material is priced at 360/kg ( 17/kg 1969). [Pg.467]

The most important hazard ia the manufacturiag of xanthates is the use of carbon disulfide (qv) because of its low flash poiat, ignition temperature, and its toxicity. A report on the manufacture of sodium ethyl xanthate at Keimecott Nevada Mines Division discusses the various safety problems and the design of a faciUty (81). A plant layout and a description of the reagent preparations are also given. [Pg.366]

R. M. Woodby and D. L. Michelsen, Emerging Technologies for Hazardous Waste Treatment Sjmposium, I EC Division of ACS, Atiantic City, N.J., June 4-7,1990. [Pg.389]

It is generally agreed that a shelter with a roof having ridge ventilation and with curtain walls not extending lower than 8 feet above the operating platform would be freely ventilated. Because a gas compressor would not be a source of hazard, except under abnormal conditions such as an equipment failure, this type of compressor shelter is usually classified as a Division 2 area. [Pg.275]

Based on Sampling and Analytical Cuide for Airborne Health Hazards, Du Pont Company, Applied Technology Division. Sampling methods... [Pg.385]

SOPHIE Selection of Procedures For Hazard Identification and Evaluation Battelle Columbus Division 505 King Avenue Columbus, OH 43201-2693 (614) 424-6424 Assists users with selection of methods to employ for identifying and evaluating hazards in chemical and petrochemical facilities. [Pg.304]

Enclosures for all equipment and panel boards shall be suitable for outdoor installation in areas designated Hazardous Class 1, Group D, Division 2. [Pg.307]

Congress passed the Occupational and Safety Health Act to ensure worker and workplace safety. Their goal was to make sure employers provide their workers a place of employment free from recognized hazards to safety and health, such as exposure to toxic chemicals, excessive noise levels, mechanical dangers, heat or cold stress, or unsanitary conditions. In order to establish standards for workplace health and safety, the Act also created the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) as the research institution for the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA). OSHA is a division of the U.S. Department of Labor which oversees the administration of the Act and enforces Federal standards in all 50 states. [Pg.25]

The design of intrinsically safe equipment is governed by the rules of NFPA Publication No. 493, Standard for Intrinsically Safe Apparatus and Associated Apparatus for Use in Class I, II, and III, Division 1, Hazardous Locations. It is cautioned, however, that the design of intrinsical-... [Pg.523]

C22.2, No. 213 Equipment for Use in Class 1, Division 2 Hazardous Locations, A Guide for the Design, Construction and Installation of Electrical Equipment John Bossert and Randolph Hurst... [Pg.548]

Electrical Equipment for Use in Class I, Division 2 Hazardous (Classified) Locations... [Pg.550]

UL 886 Outlet Boxes and Fittings for Use in Hazardous Locations in Class I, II, and III, Division 1, Hazardous Locations... [Pg.552]

UL 1604 ictrical Equipment for Use in Hazardous Locations, Class id II, Division 2, and Class III, Divisions 1 and 2... [Pg.552]

In 1968, after many years experience in plant operations, I was appointed safety adviser to the heavy organic chemicals division (later the petrochemicals division) of Imperial Chemical Industries. My appointment followed a number of serious fires in the 1960s, and therefore I was mainly concerned with process hazards rather than those of a mechanical nature. [Pg.425]

Battelle Columbus Division, Guidelines for Hazard Evaluation Procedures, The Center for Chemical Process Safety, AICliE, New York, NY, 1985. [Pg.512]

Division I Locations where hazardous material exists (always or periodically) during operating conditions... [Pg.634]

Division 2 Locations where hazardous material exists only in the case of a fault situation (leaky valve, burst pipe, faulty equipment)... [Pg.634]

FPN) Nonincendive circuit is defined in Article 100. For further information, see Electrical Equipment for Use in Class I, Division 2 Hazardous (Classified) Locations, ANSI/ISA-S12.12-1984. [Pg.637]


See other pages where Hazard divisions is mentioned: [Pg.6]    [Pg.438]    [Pg.114]    [Pg.127]    [Pg.786]    [Pg.786]    [Pg.1026]    [Pg.1026]    [Pg.1720]    [Pg.1720]    [Pg.2309]    [Pg.2317]    [Pg.266]    [Pg.447]    [Pg.104]    [Pg.911]    [Pg.349]    [Pg.503]    [Pg.79]    [Pg.637]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.417 , Pg.418 , Pg.419 , Pg.420 , Pg.421 ]




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Hazard class and division

UN hazard classes and divisions

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