From an EHS perspective, I am not inclined to identify all the old chemicals in a lab because they are simply old, and perhaps expired. It's most effective to focus on minimizing hazards, by reducing abundance and size of inventory of hazardous materials. By focusing on hazard types, and using the arguments that Ralph and Harry have highlighted, owners have very little impetus to keep old chemicals around. The pitch I like to make when there is some resistance to inventory minimization is: "You have four 2.5 L bottles of acetic acid that are at least 20 years old. Would you consider disposing of all of them if I replace them with one new 500 mL bottle?" It's short money for significant hazard avoidance.
In Hannah's case, sort your inventory list by NFPA rating if possible, and look for multiple containers of the same substance. If there are duplicates of old chemicals, then they are good candidates for disposal. Reduce inventory of unstable or highly reactive materials including peroxide formers. Reduce inventory of old aqueous solutions including acids and bases that nobody will use anymore because of quality concerns. Reduce inventory of old highly toxic materials. Purge hygroscopic chemicals that have become hydrated over time like trichloroacetic acid.
Andy Glode
From: DCHAS-L Discussion List [mailto:dchas-l**At_Symbol_Here**med.cornell.edu]On Behalf Of Harry J. Elston
Sent: Monday, August 01, 2016 9:10 PM
To: DCHAS-L**At_Symbol_Here**MED.CORNELL.EDU
Subject: Re: [DCHAS-L] Chemical Inventory
One of Elston's rules for chemical inventory management: If you haven't used it for 3 years, you don't need it. Some exceptions apply, but they are rare.
There are a few other rules, such as "expiration dates probably aren't" for most purposes. I think Ralph hit a good point - you're taking up valuable lab space.
Harry
On Fri, Jul 29, 2016 at 3:46 PM, Hannah Corcoran <bffblue14**At_Symbol_Here**hotmail.com> wrote:
Our research lab is currently updating the chemical inventory. Other than bottles/containers that are broken/cracked, I'd appreciate any advice on discerning which chemicals can be purged or disposed of. Many of the chemicals are dated over 20 years ago, but I know of at least a few that have an indefinite shelf life.
Any guidance in this area is quite welcome.
Thank you,
Hannah Corcoran
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Harry J. Elston, Ph.D., CIH
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