In its recent investigation of chemical reactivity accidents, the US Chemical Safety Board noted a gap in technical guidance and regulatory coverage. This volume closes the gap in technical guidance, helping small and large companies alike identify, address, and manage chemical reactivity hazards. It guides the reader through an analysis of the potential for chemical reactivity accidents to help prevent fires, explosions, toxic chemical releases or chemical spills. This volume is applicable to processes at any scale and is particularly useful for chemists, safety managers, and engineers…mehr
In its recent investigation of chemical reactivity accidents, the US Chemical Safety Board noted a gap in technical guidance and regulatory coverage. This volume closes the gap in technical guidance, helping small and large companies alike identify, address, and manage chemical reactivity hazards. It guides the reader through an analysis of the potential for chemical reactivity accidents to help prevent fires, explosions, toxic chemical releases or chemical spills. This volume is applicable to processes at any scale and is particularly useful for chemists, safety managers, and engineers involved in scale-up. An enclosed CD-ROM provides portable checklists, analysis tools, and a list of additional references. Special Details: Electronic Copy available free of charge. Visit http: //www.aiche.org/ccps/resources.htm for details. To Purchase a Bound Copy click "Add to Cart" above. Note: CD-ROM/DVD and other supplementary materials are not included as part of eBook file.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Robert W. Johnson is the author of Essential Practices for Managing Chemical Reactivity Hazards, published by Wiley. Steven W. Rudy is the author of Essential Practices for Managing Chemical Reactivity Hazards, published by Wiley. Stephen D. Unwin is the author of Essential Practices for Managing Chemical Reactivity Hazards, published by Wiley.
Inhaltsangabe
Preface. Acknowledgments. Abbreviations and Acronyms. 1. Introduction and Overview. 1.1 Purpose. 1.2 Need. 1.3 Unintentional/Intentional Chemistry Incidents. 1.4 How to Use This Publication. 1.5 Related Resources. 2. Chemical Reactivity Hazard Management. 2.1 Key Considerations for Managing Chemical Reactivity Hazards. 2.2 Life Cycle Issues. 2.3 Existing Management Systems. 2.4 Product Stewardship. 3. Preliminary Screening Method for Chemical Reactivity Hazards. 3.1 Intentional Chemistry. 3.2 Mixing and Physical Processing. 3.3 Storage, Handling, and Repackaging. 4. Essential Management Practices. 4.1 Put into Place a System to Manage Chemical Reactivity Hazards. 4.2 Collect Reactivity Hazard Information. 4.3 Identify Chemical Reactivity Hazards. 4.4 Test for Chemical Reactivity. 4.5 Asses Chemical Reactivity Risks. 4.6 Identify Process Controls and Risk Management Options. 4.7 Document Chemical Reactivity Risks and Management Decisions. 4.8 Communicate and Train on Chemical Reactivity Hazards. 4.9 Investigate Chemical Reactivity Incidents. 4.10 Review, Audit, Manage Change, and Improve Hazard Management Practices and Program. 5. Worked Examples. 5.1 Intentional Chemistry Example. 5.2 Combustor Example. 5.3 Repackaging Example. 5.4 Physical Processing Example. 5.5 Mixing Example. 5.6 Oxygen System Example. 6. Future Work on Chemical Reactivity Hazards. 6.1 Inform. 6.2 Communicate. Glossary. References. A-1. Case Histories. A-2. An Inherently Safer Process Checklist. A-3. Executive Summary of CSB Investigation Report. Content of CD-ROM. Index.
Preface. Acknowledgments. Abbreviations and Acronyms. 1. Introduction and Overview. 1.1 Purpose. 1.2 Need. 1.3 Unintentional/Intentional Chemistry Incidents. 1.4 How to Use This Publication. 1.5 Related Resources. 2. Chemical Reactivity Hazard Management. 2.1 Key Considerations for Managing Chemical Reactivity Hazards. 2.2 Life Cycle Issues. 2.3 Existing Management Systems. 2.4 Product Stewardship. 3. Preliminary Screening Method for Chemical Reactivity Hazards. 3.1 Intentional Chemistry. 3.2 Mixing and Physical Processing. 3.3 Storage, Handling, and Repackaging. 4. Essential Management Practices. 4.1 Put into Place a System to Manage Chemical Reactivity Hazards. 4.2 Collect Reactivity Hazard Information. 4.3 Identify Chemical Reactivity Hazards. 4.4 Test for Chemical Reactivity. 4.5 Asses Chemical Reactivity Risks. 4.6 Identify Process Controls and Risk Management Options. 4.7 Document Chemical Reactivity Risks and Management Decisions. 4.8 Communicate and Train on Chemical Reactivity Hazards. 4.9 Investigate Chemical Reactivity Incidents. 4.10 Review, Audit, Manage Change, and Improve Hazard Management Practices and Program. 5. Worked Examples. 5.1 Intentional Chemistry Example. 5.2 Combustor Example. 5.3 Repackaging Example. 5.4 Physical Processing Example. 5.5 Mixing Example. 5.6 Oxygen System Example. 6. Future Work on Chemical Reactivity Hazards. 6.1 Inform. 6.2 Communicate. Glossary. References. A-1. Case Histories. A-2. An Inherently Safer Process Checklist. A-3. Executive Summary of CSB Investigation Report. Content of CD-ROM. Index.
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