Department Safety Training
To ensure the health and safety of one another, and reduce risk of personal injury or property damage, students and faculty engage in chemical safety training and protocols prior to participation in chemistry laboratories. This page highlights some resources and information that help ensure a safe laboratory and research environment.
Guide Books
Presentations
- Laboratory Safety Training (1.8 MB PowerPoint - ppt)
- Chemical Hygiene (800 KB PowerPoint - pptx)
Appalachian Campus Safety Resources
Statement of Understanding and Avoiding Chemical Transfer in the Laboratory
Revised 11/28/2016.
Inadvertent transfer of chemicals can, and does, happen while working in the laboratory especially when best practices for handling and use of chemicals are not followed.
This statement highlights common activities that may lead to chemical transfer and outlines preventative lab behavior that reduces or avoids exposure to chemicals by inadvertent transfer. There are several common activities which could easily result in chemicals being transferred from one part of the body to another or from one surface to another. These are often unconscious behaviors that you must learn to avoid while working in the lab. Examples of common activities that could result in inadvertent chemical transfer are:
- Placing your pen in your mouth or lifting your goggles to rub your eyes or face. You should always assume that any object or surface in a chemistry lab may be contaminated with chemicals.
- Handling your computer or phone while in lab. Your instructor will advise you of their class policy on cell phone use. Having devices out in lab is often convenient, but be very aware of chemical transfer when using them. Always remove gloves prior to use and do not lay the devices directly on the benchtop unless you have wiped it down. Never lay your phone next to an area where you are actively working with chemicals. A contaminated phone will transfer chemicals right to your face. A chemical spill on a cell phone, a rather expensive item, will result in disposal of that item as hazardous waste. Consider protecting cell phones by placing them in a baggie while you are in lab.
- Not removing gloves when leaving the lab. Upon completion of an experiment or other laboratory work, your gloves should be removed and your hands washed. Gloves should always be removed prior to leaving the lab so that you do not contaminate doorknobs and other surfaces. However, if you are transferring chemicals from one room to another, the chemical(s) should be in a secondary container such as a carry tote and only the hand actively handling the tote should be gloved. The other hand should be glove free to open doors.
Laboratory Material Safety Data Sheets (MSDS)
Laboratory Safety Contact
Tim Leonard
Director of Stockroom Operations
(828) 262-2962
leonardtg@appstate.edu