1 / 16

Safe Use of Hydrofluoric Acid

Safe Use of Hydrofluoric Acid. Department of Environmental Health & Safety University of Connecticut. What is Hydrofluoric Acid?.

omer
Download Presentation

Safe Use of Hydrofluoric Acid

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Safe Use of Hydrofluoric Acid Department of Environmental Health & Safety University of Connecticut

  2. What is Hydrofluoric Acid? • Hydrofluoric Acid (HF) is a weak inorganic acid used primarily in industrial processes: glass etching, metal cleaning, electronics manufacturing,laboratory reagent, etc. • Properties: - Clear, colorless and highly corrosive liquid - Miscible in water - Acrid, irritating odor - Noncombustible - OSHA PEL and ACGIH TLV is 3ppm

  3. Hydrofluoric Acid- Chemical Properties • HF etches glass by forming strong bonds between the fluoride anions and the silicon molecules in glass • HF is reactive with concrete, enamels, glazes, rubber and many organic compounds • Upon reactions with metals, HF generates hydrogen gas which could pose an explosion hazard

  4. Hydrofluoric Acid- Hazards • Poison!Extremely corrosive liquid and vapor that can cause severe injury via skin and eye contact, inhalation or ingestion. • Mechanisms • Corrosive Burns- from free H+ ions • Chemical Burns- from penetration of fluoride ions

  5. Hydrofluoric Acid- Toxicity • Upon skin contact, HF readilypenetrates through the skin and forms insoluble salts with calcium and magnesium • Soluble salts are also formed but dissociate rapidly. Consequently fluoride ions release, leading to further deep tissue destruction. • Pain is believed to result from nerve irritation caused by the influx of potassium ions compensating for the depletion of calcium ions.

  6. Hydrofluoric Acid- Symptom Onset • Concentrations: ● >50% solutions lead to immediate, severe burning pain with blisters ● 20-50% solutions lead to redness, swelling, and blistering after 8 hours ● <20% solutions may not produce symptoms for up to 24hours • Deaths have been reported from burns of less than 2.5% body surface area.

  7. Hydrofluoric Acid- Health Effects • Skin Contact- tissue destruction, necrosis, hypocalcemia, hyperkalemia, hypomagnesia • Eye Contact- severe burns, cornea destruction, blindness • Ingestion- severe burns to the mouth, esophagus and stomach • Inhalation- coughing, choking, bronchospasms, acute pulmonary edema

  8. Hydrofluoric Acid- Safe Work Practices • Prior to use of HF, researchers should familiarize themselves with the MSDS, standard operating procedures, emergency response and first aid. • Never work alone or after hours with HF • All work using HF should take place in a fume hood • Never heat HF

  9. Hydrofluoric Acid- Safe Work Practices • Ensure each container of HF is clearly labeled • HF should only be stored in polyethylene or Teflon containers • Secondary containers should also be compatible with HF (e.g. no glass, metal, etc.) • HF containers should be tightly-sealed when not in use and kept away from other glassware

  10. Hydrofluoric Acid- PPE • Eyes- Tight-fitting goggles or full-face shield in conjunction with goggles • Hands- medium or heavyweight neoprene, natural rubber, viton or nitrile gloves • Wearing two pairs of gloves is recommended • Always consult the manufacturer’s glove selection guide • Body- lab coat, acid-resistant apron,long pants,closed-toed shoes

  11. Hydrofluoric Acid- First Aid • Skin Contact • Immediately move to nearest wash station/eyewash and rinse with water • While rinsing, remove contaminated clothing • Have someone else in the lab call 911 for emergency medical assistance • Continue rinsing with water for 5 minutes • If available, apply calcium gluconate gel to the affected area using clean gloves • If calcium gluconate gel is not available, continue rinsing the affected area under water until medical care arrives

  12. Hydrofluoric Acid- First Aid • Eye Contact • Immediately flush eyes with waterfor 15 minutes • While flushing eyes, have someone from the lab call 911 for emergency medical assistance • If available, irrigate eyes with 1% calcium gluconate solution(DO NOTPUT CALCIUM GLUCONATE GELS IN EYES) • Ingestion • Immediately drink large amounts of water to dilute the acid • Call 911 for emergency medical assistance • Do NOT induce vomiting • If available, milk, Mylanta or antacid tablets can also be administered

  13. Hydrofluoric Acid- First Aid • Inhalation • Move the affected person to fresh air • Call 911 for emergency assistance • Keep affected person warm and comfortable • If breathing stops, begin CPR or use an inhalator • Oxygen should be administered as soon as emergency medical personnel arrive

  14. Hydrofluoric Acid- Spills • In the event of a spill of hydrofluoric acid: • Evacuate the lab • Close all doors • Post “DO NOT ENTER” signs on the doors • Call 911 to alert the UCONN Fire Department • Report to the lab’s designated meeting place • For large spills/releases, pull the fire alarm to evacuate the building

  15. Hydrofluoric Acid- Disposal • Place HF and HF contaminated waste intightly-sealed plastic containers • Label HF waste containers with the words “Hazardous Waste” and “Hydrofluoric Acid” • Submit a chemical waste pick-up request to EH&S at http://ehs.uconn.edu/cwc/request.php

  16. References • Harvard University. March 2007. “Guidelines for the Safe Use of Hydrofluoric Acid.” 15 Jan 2010. http://www.chem.harvard.edu/safety/safe_use_of_HF_acid.pdf . • Occupational Safety & Health Administration. 27 Apr 1999. “Hydrogen Fluoride.” 15 Jan 2010. http://www.osha.gov/SLTC/healthguidelines/hydrogenfluoride/index.html . • Wilkes, Gary. 18 Sept 2009. “Hydrofluoric Acid Burns.” 15 Jan 2010. http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/773304-overview.

More Related