Hazardous Waste Disposal
Hazardous Waste Collection and Disposal. It is not too much
of an exaggeration to say that virtually everything except distilled water
is considered to be hazardous waste, and must be handled and disposed of
according to EPA (Environmental Protection Agency) guidelines. Hazardous
waste disposal is overseen by Mr. David Messier (email: dmessier@wpi.edu),
who supplies labels for hazardous waste containers and picks up full
containers by appointment. With few exceptions, reagents and solvents used
by students must be collected in appropriate containers and disposed of
via Dave Messier.
A few substances can still be disposed of in the sink drains,
accompanied by a substantial water flush. These include
- Aqueous sodium chloride
- Aqueous sodium sulfate
- Aqueous sodium carbonate or sodium hydrogen carbonate
- Aqueous sodium phosphate, sodium hydrogen phosphate, or sodium
dihydrogen phosphate
- Dilute aqueous sodium acetate
- Dilute aqueous hydrochloric acid (6 M or less)
- Dilute aqueous sulfuric acid (6 M or less)
- Dilute aqueous nitric acid (6 M or less)
- Dilute aqueous sodium hydroxide (6 M or less)
- Dilute aqueous potassium hydroxide (6 M or less)
- Dilute aqueous ammonia
- Dilute aqueous phosphoric acid (6 M or less)
- Dilute aqueous acetic acid (6 M or less)
All other materials must be collected in bottles with official
hazardous waste labels. Labels must be properly filled out with the names
and weight percentages of the component materials, and toxicity, corrosive
ability, potential flammability, and potential reactivity must be
indicated. OMISSION OF ANY OF THIS INFORMATION IS A VIOLATION OF EPA
POLICY.
Three categories of waste will commonly occur in the general chemistry
labs:
- Non-halogenated organic solvents. The halogens are the elements,
fluorine, chlorine, bromine, and iodine. Organic liquids NOT containing
any of these elements are called non-halogenated organic solvents. They
include but are not limited to
- acetone
- ethanol
- methanol
- isopropanol
- benzene
- toluene
- tetrahydrofuran
- acetonitrile
- glacial acetic acid
- Halogenated organic solvents. These are organic liquids that contain
one or more of the elements fluorine, chlorine, bromine, and iodine in
their chemical structures. They include but are not limited to
- chloroform
- dichloromethane
- carbon tetrachloride
- methyl iodide
- tetrachloroethane
- dichlorethane
- freons
- "Heavy Metals". These include the transition metals and the heavier
elements of groups 13, 14, and 15. Common "heavy" metals, which usually
occur in cationic form, are
- aluminum
- gallium
- indium
- thallium (very poisonous)
- tin
- lead (very poisonous)
- chromium (carcinogen in some forms)
- manganese
- iron
- cobalt
- nickel
- copper
- zinc
- cadmium (very poisonous)
- mercury (very poisonous)
- uranium
When any of these three categories of substance is to be used in a general chemistry experiment, THERE MUST BE PROPERLY
LABELLED AND SIZED WASTE CONTAINERS AVAILABLE IN ALL HOODS IN GH109/110. It is your responsibility to properly dispose of
these substances.