The Proper Way To Stock Up Chemicals

High school chemistry was indeed a blast.  It was actually my very first time to cut a frog but hold it, that is biology.  Biology and chemistry subjects used only one laboratory back then so I got confused.  The bright colored bulk bottling of chemicals were next to containers of animals.  It was basically both a zoo and a chemical laboratory.  It was definitely a teen’s wonderland.  It was similar to my own room complete with music band posters.

In place of music bands, there were prints of chemical safety with logos around the walls.  There’s this band in the school called Toxic and Caution.  The images of the skeleton or the burning fire never really left my mind.  Despite the fact that their personal message is lost and folks don’t notice them today, these people were absolutely hits back then.  Perhaps it’s because their boss, at the same time my teacher, has been instructing for many years.  She is positive that the laboratory setup is good the way it is and doesn’t have to implement the tips from the poster.  It led me to think that all the schools store chemicals in any order.

Basic safety posters are not just decorations.  These posters present chemical storage in the proper, safe way and therefore are short of added details and further description.  The written warnings and logos in red mean potential danger.  All poisonous chemicals are harmful with wrong handling or if inhaled.  Wrong handling would mean substances should not be stored just anywhere.

Flammable substances are generally susceptible and when exposed to electrical contacts, say for example a regular fridge, it might spark danger.  Expert handling just like those in bulk bottling services has special equipment for hazardous chemicals.  While instructors are training students about chemical safety concepts, the staffs of chemical handling are working hard to make chemicals all set for use.  These kinds of individuals are role models in the industry and I see them as today’s heroes.  They are people usually disregarded but they’re equally as important.

They understand the need for filing chemicals by groups and not in alphabetical order. That’s the way my teacher used to arrange the chemicals.  Alphabetical series can make chemicals readily accessible yet makes the risks very easy also.  Chemicals should be in systems or groups.  The flammable chemicals need to have their very own space away from reactive substances.

Certain chemicals, such as the extremely deadly ones, need stocking in small amounts also.   There’s a contract bottling company which provides customers the precise amount to the last drop.   For school research uses, these are the better choice.   If ever they could provide for school safety, they can provide for the safety of other trades of course.