Plastics, Safety Colours & Pigmentation
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Technical advice regarding our containers General This applies to aspects of materials used in manufacture, safety, handling, labelling, hazard warnings, colours and pigmentation as well as safety aspects during final disposal (incineration). Material Toxicity Pigments & colours Fumes & emissions Skin and physical contact Behaviour of material during manufacture, ignition & incineration When heated in air it melts at between 160 - 170 degrees Celsius. Decomposition starts at 330 degrees Celsius releasing low molecular weight hydrocarbons which can be ignited by flame. Once ignited, the burning of the material generates sufficient heat to continue spontaneously and to complete decomposition (transposition) providing sufficient oxygen is supplied to the burn. Decomposition (burning) continues even with the initial ignition source withdrawn. Burning of the polymer (container) will positively improve the burning of the contents or items within the immediate area of the burn;* (see notation) Safety first *Notation ( information useful for incinerator personnel ) A typical, clean burn will result in ordinary waste and harmless residues suitable for landfill. If difficult or 'dirty' burns are experienced, the mix of contaminated waste offered for incineration comprises a high level of materials which do not readily burn or decompose such as PVC, bottles, blood-bags, tubing, connectors, valves, common ice cream containers, syringes, nappyliners and/or bed-lining and other such materials. Dirty, environment damaging burns are experienced more frequently now that larger hospitals are collecting contaminated medical waste material via re-usable containers. This waste, commonly moist and mixed with 'wrong' non combustible materials, will burn 'dirty' as it is devoid of easily ignitable materials. In order to burn such waste successfully, incinerator operators, although reluctant, have to entice the burn with additives such as waste oils which result in toxic air pollution. If a dirty burn occurs, a change in the incinerator mix of material should be considered prior to each burn. Waste material collected in disposable containers and offered to the burn already possess the incendiaries required for a cleaner burn without the emission of dangerous gases. A single polyethylene Disposal safe has many times the combustion power of a cardboard box and when a burn is prepared with 50 or so polypropylene disposable safes filled with medical waste, the combustion power is such that it will successfully 'consume' the contents with a clean burn without harmful emissions. Please note For further information please contact IDC Customer Service. |