From: Edward Movitz <movitz**At_Symbol_Here**OLEMISS.EDU>
Subject: Re: [DCHAS-L] Labeling synthesized chemicals in vials
Date: Mon, 3 Mar 2014 16:56:55 +0000
Reply-To: DCHAS-L <DCHAS-L**At_Symbol_Here**MED.CORNELL.EDU>
Message-ID: 0FB0C2AEFFCA124C8D89CE078617FC29063250D3**At_Symbol_Here**exchange1.ad.olemiss.edu
In-Reply-To


My University has built a pharmacy school and a natural products research center by following the medicine men and women into the forest, collecting thousands of plant samples, bringing the materials back to the campus, and extracting tens of thousands of compounds in the search for bioactive anti-cancer agents. 


This type of research produces drum size quantities of little vials filled with unidentified, extracted natural products. The vials can be anywhere from 0 to 100 % liquid, and 0 to 100% solid.  Most materials are extracted by the magic mixtures of Hexane and Ethyl Acetate.

What we do know, and what we can certify about the contents, is pretty limited, but these materials are generally non-halogenated, non PCB, non-corrosive, non-reactive with no metals that matter. Many of these unknown and unidentified materials will be sent for very limited testing, and a majority will be discarded without us ever knowing the name or the structure of the compound.


The production and disposal of this type of material (buckets full of little vials of miscellaneous organic compounds, mixtures and extracts) is similar to the disposal situation when an Organic chemist and their graduate students complete a synthetic project, or just leave the University in the middle of the night.


So, with a waste stream comprised of plant extracts and plant materials in vials, we wrote a disposal profile with our waste vendor for, you guessed it, PLANT EXTRACT/PLANT MATERIAL IN VIALS.

 

We have used similar profiles with many of the major hazardous waste disposal companies in the country. This profile is for bulked materials; we do not lab pack or used any packing material or absorbents in the drums.


So, sit down with your waste vendor and explain this situation or just copy the information from this message. Bottom line is that you have a waste stream that you can characterize, and the waste companies want your money.


For our GM report, we list the material as: Bulked containers of out of date and out of spec non-acute samples and materials from research activities - Flammable Liquids, Hexane, and Ethyl Acetate.


Source code G11

Discarding off-specification, out-of-date, and/or unused chemicals or products.

Form code W203

Concentrated non-halogenated solvent.


Off-site management method/code H061

Fuel blending prior to energy recovery at another site (waste generated either on-site or received from off-site).

 

Hope this helps.
Ed


         

 

 

Edward M. Movitz

Health & Safety Officer / FSO

The University of Mississippi 

Department of Health and Safety

P.O. Box 1848

100 Health and Safety Building

University, MS 38677-1848

U.S.A.

O:+1-662-915-5433 | F: 662-915-5480

movitz**At_Symbol_Here**olemiss.edu |  www.olemiss.edu |  Health & Safety Web Site

 

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From: DCHAS-L Discussion List [dchas-l**At_Symbol_Here**MED.CORNELL.EDU] on behalf of Kohler, Christopher E [cekohler**At_Symbol_Here**IU.EDU]
Sent: Friday, February 28, 2014 9:52 AM
To: DCHAS-L**At_Symbol_Here**MED.CORNELL.EDU
Subject: [DCHAS-L] Labeling synthesized chemicals in vials

Dear DCHAS Listers,

 

We are interested in how various colleges and universities label synthesized chemical materials in small quantities in vials.

 

Some of our organic chemists have hundreds of samples in small vials labelled with structures only. Some samples may or may not be novel substances.

 

This becomes a problem when someone retires or leaves and our hazardous waste group is tasked with identifying hundreds of samples for disposal purposes.

 

What do you require?

 

Actual chemical names? Associated hazards? Can they be grouped and stored in similar chemical groups.

 

Any information is very much appreciated.

 

Thanks,

 

Chris

 

Christopher E. Kohler

Laboratory Safety Manager

University Environmental Health and Safety

Indiana University

1514 E Third Street

Bloomington, IN 47405

(812) 855-5454

cekohler**At_Symbol_Here**iu.edu

 

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