I spoke with my colleague, Bill Peck, at UCLA this morning and he gave me permission to add some details to the accident description. A 23 year old female research associate/laboratory technician intended to add an (unknown) aliquot of 1.6 M t-bu-Li (in pentane) to a round bottom flask, placed in a dry ice/acetone bath. She had been employed in the lab for about 3 months. The incident occurred on Dec. 29, during the UCLA holiday shutdown between Christmas and New Years. Researchers are granted permission to work during the shut down for "critical research needs." There were two post doctoral researchers working in the lab and the adjacent lab, with limited English proficiency. The principal investigator had trained the employee to slightly pressurize the bottle (an ~ 250 ml Aldrich Sure Seal container) with Argon and withdraw the desired aliquot using a 60 ml syringe, fitted with a 20 gauge needle. The PI likes to use these particular syringes because they have a tight seal. There is no evidence that the employee used this method. Speculation: she may have just tried to pull up the aliquot in the syringe. Somehow, the syringe plunger popped out or was pul led out of the syringe barrel, splashing the employee with t-bu-Li and pent ane. The mixture caught fire, upon contact with air. She was wearing nitr ile gloves, safety glasses and synthetic sweater. She was not wearing a la b coat. The fire ignited the gloves and the sweater. Six feet from the fume hood was an emergency shower. When the employee's gloves and clothing caught fire, she ran from the area away from the shower. One of the post-docs used his lab coat to smother the flames. 911 was called. UCLA Fire Dept. and emergency medical, Los Angeles City Fire, and Los Angeles County Haz Mat. The EMTs put the employee in the safety shower for gross decon and then transported her to the ER. She's currently in the Grossman burn unit in Sherman Oaks with second degree burns on her arms and third degree burns on her hands, a total of about 40% of her body. There was very little damage to the lab. Bill has not interviewed the employee. Cal/OSHA began their investigation of the accident on Monday, 1/5/09, asking for training records, accident report, etc. UCLA EH&S has begun an audit of the Molecular Sciences Building, where the accident happened. The building is the home for much of the Chemistry Department research, principally organic. Ya'll be careful out there. Debbie M. Decker, Campus Chemical Safety Officer Environmental Health and Safety University of California, Davis 1 Shields Ave. Davis, CA 95616 (530)754-7964/(530)752-4527 (FAX) dmdecker**At_Symbol_Here**ucdavis.edu Co-Conspirator to Make the World A Better Place -- Visit www.HeroicStories.com and join the conspiracy
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