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Definition
Capable of burning, corroding, dissolving, or eating away by chemical action. pH greater than 7 in its standard state. |
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A phenomenon that occurs during the rapid release (boiling) of a liquified gas that causes it to temporarily remain in a liquid state through rapid cooling. RISK: False assumption of product elimination until the product resumes boiling and subsequent release. |
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Producing disease through living microorganisms that can mutate and become toxins are more deadly. |
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Toxins can be small molecules, peptides, or proteins that are capable of causing dises on contact with or absorption by body tissues. RISK: Affects human health in a variety of ways ranging from allergic reactions to death. |
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Any substance whose aqueous solutions are characterized by a sourt taste, the ability to turn blue litmus red, and the ability to react with bases and certain metals to form salts. pH less than 7 in its standard state. |
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A chemical compound, including the cyanide group, that affects bodily functions by preventing the normal utilization of oxygen by body tissues. The term "blood agent" is a misnomer, however, because these agents to not actually affect the blood in anyway instead affects hemoglobin. |
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Definition
Temperature at which the transition from a liquid to a gast state occurs. At this temperature, the vapor pressure of a liquid equals the surrounding atmospheric pressure so that the liquid rapidly becomes a vapor. |
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Definition
A substance that initiates or accelerates a chemical reaction without itself being affected. |
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Changes that take place on the molecular level. A chemical change produces a new substance. |
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Caused when two or more chemicals, or the chemical and its container are incompatible. |
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Separate elements that bond together to form compound mixture, they have a tendency to break down into their component parts, sometimes in an explosive manner. |
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Definition
When dealing with corrosives, the amount of acid or base is compared to the amount of water present. |
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Definition
The minimum temperature at which a gas can be liquefied no matter how much pressure is applied. A gas cannot be liquefied above its critical temperature. |
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Definition
The pressure that must be applied to bring a gas to its liquid state. |
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Definition
Materials that can react or ignite if they are exposed to air. |
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A measure of a substance's tendency to deteriorate in the presence of another substance or in a particular environment. |
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The concentration or amount of material to which the body is exposed over a specific time period. |
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Is the period of time it takes for a substance undergoing decay to decrease by half. |
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Definition
The biological reaction caused by the does in the body. The degree of harm is directly related to the dose (time and amount)and its impact on bodily functions. |
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Definition
The amount of gas produced by a given volume of liquid at a given temperature. |
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The minimum temperature at which a material gives off vapor in sufficient concentration to form an ignitable mixture with air and will not continue to burn. |
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Definition
The temperature at which enough vapors are given off to support continuous burning. |
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Flammable (Explosive) Range |
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Definition
The difference between the upper and lower limits. |
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Definition
Pertaining to a class of chemical compounds that formerly comprised only those existing in or derived from plants or animals, but that now includes all other compounds of carbon. |
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Definition
The minimum concentration of vapor to air below which a flame will not propagate in the presence of an ignition source. Also known as "too lean to burn." |
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Upper explosive limit (UEL) |
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Definition
Is the maximum vapor to air concentration above, which flame will not propagate. Also known as "too rich to burn" |
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Definition
They are 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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Definition
Added to products to control their chemical reaction with other products. If it is not added or escapes during an incident, the material will begin to polymerize, which creates a very dangerous situation. |
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Ignition (Auto-ignition) Temperature |
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Definition
The temperature at which a material (solid, liquid, or gas) will self-ignite and sustain combustion in air without an external spark or flame. |
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Definition
Materials that decompose spontaneously, polymerize, or otherwise self-react and generally considered unstable. |
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Term
Ionic and covalent compounds |
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Definition
Materials made through the sharing or transfer of electrons. |
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Term
Irritants (Riot Control Agents) |
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Definition
They cause respiratory distress and copious tearing that incapacitate a victim. |
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Maximum Safe Storage Temperature (MSST) |
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Definition
The maximum temperature that an organic peroxide may be stored safely. |
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Definition
The separation of a substance into two or more simpler substance, or of a molecule into atoms or ions, by the action of heat or a chemical process. Dissociation is usually reversible. |
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Definition
The temperature at which a solid becomes a liquid allowing it to spread more readily. |
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Definition
The temperature at which a liquid converts to a solid. |
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Definition
Refers to the tendency or ability of two or more liquids to form a uniform blend or to dissolve in eachother. A) Miscibility is complete solubility, B) Generally seen in liquids, C)Water and ethyl alcohol are miscible, oil and water are not. |
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Definition
Substances that interfere with the central nervous system. |
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Composed of matter that is not animal or vegetable; not having the organized structure of living things. Inorganic material lacks carbon chains. |
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Definition
The combining of anything with oxygen or the propensity to yield oxygen which will present a greater hazard. |
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Definition
Persistence refers to a chemical's ability to remain in the environment. The more persistent, the greater the propensity for it to remain harmful over a period of time. |
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The numerical measure of a solution's hydrogen ion concentration as related to acidity or alkalinity. |
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Definition
The process when objects undergo a change that does not change their chemical properties. |
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Physical State (solid, liquid, gas) |
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Definition
The characteristic form of a material at ambient temperature. |
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Definition
Any process in which relatively small molecules, called monomers, combine chemically to produce a very large chain-like or network molecule, called a polymer. |
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Definition
Spontaneous emission of ionization radiation as a consequence of a nuclear reaction, or directly from the breakdown of an unstable nucleus. |
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Term
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Definition
Positively charged particle emitted by some radioactive materials and is not considered dangerous unless ingested. |
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Definition
Can damage skin tissue, and they can damage internal organs if they enter the body. Full protective clothing, including positive pressure SCBA will protect against this type of RAD. |
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Definition
Causes skin burns and can severely injure internal organs; therefore, protective clothing is inadequate in preventing this RAD from harming the body. |
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Definition
Describes the sensitivity of a material to water without the addition of heat or confinement. |
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Definition
Chemical compounds that temporarily make people unable to function by causing irritation to the eyes, mouth, throat, lungs, and skin. |
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Term
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Definition
Hydrocarbons that contain only single bonds. They are also called alkanes or paraffin hydrocarbons. |
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Term
Unsaturated Hyrdrocarbons |
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Definition
Materials that have at least one multiple bond between two carbon atoms somewhere in molecule, which causes them to be more hazardous. A) Those with at least one double bond are called alkenes and those with at least one triple bond are called alkynes. |
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Term
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Definition
Materials that contain the benzene "ring" which is formed by six carbon atoms and contains double bonds. Its greatest hazard is toxicity. |
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Term
Self-accelerating decomposition temperature |
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Definition
When this temperature is reached by some portion of the mass of the organic peroxide, irreversible decomposition will begin A) this reaction can be violent, usually rupturing the vessel or container dispersing peroxide, liquid and gaseous decomposition products products considerable distance. |
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Definition
The ability of a substance to form a solution with water can be important when determining control methods. For example, gasoline is insoluble, while anhydrous ammonia is soluble. |
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Definition
Mixture in which all of the ingredients are completely dissolved. |
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Term
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Definition
Pourable mixture of a solid and a liquid. |
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Definition
The weight of a solid or liquid compared to an equal volume of water. |
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Definition
The concentration of a solution. In corrosives, strength refers to the degree ionization of an acid or a base in water. |
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Term
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Definition
The ability of a substance to change from the solid to the vapor phase without passing through a liquid phase. |
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Term
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Definition
Influences the hazards present and the measures taken to control an incident that involves that products. |
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Term
Toxic Products of Combustion |
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Definition
Byproducts of the comustion process that are harmful to humans. Some materials generate more highly toxic gases than others do; therefore, appropriate levels of protective clothing and equipment must be used to counter them. |
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Term
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Definition
Weight of a vapor compared to air. |
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Term
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Definition
The force exerted by the gas or vapor released by a liquid or solid substance in a closed container or space. |
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Term
Vesicants (Blister Agents) |
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Definition
These agents are extremely toxic, with the symptoms of exposure not appearing for minutes, hours, or days. |
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Term
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Definition
Measure of the thickness of a liquid, determines how easily it flows. |
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Term
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Definition
Ease with which a liquid or solid can pass into the vapor state. This will affect the dispersment in air and expand the endangered area. |
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Term
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Definition
Counts per minute and kilcounts perminute are measurements of RAD. It is the number of atoms in a given quantity of RAD material that are detected to have decayed in one minute. |
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Term
Immediately Dangerous to Life and Health (IDLH) Value |
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Definition
Maximum level to which a healthy worker can be exposed for 30 mins and escape without suffering irreversible health effects or impairment. |
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Term
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Definition
The latency between exposure to a pathogen and onset of symptoms. |
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Term
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Definition
Amount of a pathogen necessary to manifest its pathogenicity. |
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Term
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Definition
Amount of material in air that is expected to kill 50 percent of a group of test animals when administered in a specific time period. |
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Term
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Definition
Causes death of 50 percent of a group of test animals exposed to it by any route other than inhalation. |
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Term
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Definition
The ratio of the amount of one substance to the amount of another, expressed as a unit of solute dissolved in one million units of solution. |
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Term
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Definition
Number of units of one substance relative to one billion units of another. |
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Term
Permissible Exposure Limit (PEL) |
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Definition
Regulatory limits on the amount or concentration of a substance in the air. 95% of healthy adults will not suffer affects. |
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Term
Radiation Absorbed Dose (rad) |
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Definition
Equals the energy absorption of 100 ergs per gram of irradiated material. Largely obsolete due to centigray. |
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Term
Roentgen Equivalent Man (rem) |
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Definition
International unit of intensity of x-rays and gamma rays. |
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Term
Threshold limit value ceiling (TLV-C) |
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Definition
Max concentration to qhich a healthy adult can be exposed without risk of injury, and the exposure to higher concentrations should not occur. |
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Term
Threshold limit value short-term exposure limit (TLV-STEL) |
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Definition
Max average concentration, averaged over a 15-minute period, to which a healthy adult can be safely exposed for 15 mins four times a day. |
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Term
Threshold limit value time weighted average (TLV-TWA) |
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Definition
Max concentration averaged over 8 hours to which a healthy adult can be repeatedly exposed for 8 hours per day 80 hours a week. |
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Term
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Definition
Substances propensity to release energy or undergo change, for example self reaction, polymerization or violent reaction. |
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Term
Three Types of Response Objectives |
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Definition
Offensive, Defensive, Nonintervention |
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Term
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Definition
Change applied stress, move stressor, move stressed system, shield stressed system |
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Term
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Definition
Chill contents, limit stress levels, activate venting devices, mechanical repair |
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Term
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Definition
Change container position, minimize pressure differential, cap off breach, remove contents |
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Term
Change Size of Danger Zone |
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Definition
Barries, adsorbents, absorbents, diluents, reactants, overpack |
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Term
Change Exposures Contacted |
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Definition
Provide sheltering, begin evacuation, PPE |
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Term
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Definition
Rinse off contamination, increase distance from source, provide shielding, provide prompt medical attention |
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