(1) chemicals and corporate logo
It mainly indicates the name, address, telephone number, emergency telephone number, fax and e-mail address of the chemical, and it is suggested to indicate the product code of the supplier at the same time. This part should also explain the recommended use and restricted use of chemicals.
(2) risk overview
It mainly includes the main physical and chemical hazard information of chemicals, as well as the information on the impact on human health and the environment. If chemicals have been classified according to GHS, the GHS hazard category should be indicated, and the labeling elements of GHS, such as pictograms or symbols, precautions, hazard information and warning words, should be indicated. Pictograms or symbols such as flame, skull and Crossbones can be represented in black and white. Hazards not included in GHS classification (such as dust explosion hazard) should also be indicated here.
The main symptoms and emergency summary after personnel contact should be indicated.
(3) Composition/composition information
This part should indicate whether the chemical is a substance or a mixture.
If it is a substance, the chemical name or common name, American Chemical Abstracts Registration Number (CAS number) and other identifiers shall be provided. If a substance is classified as a dangerous chemical according to the GHS classification standard, the chemical names or common names of all dangerous components, including impurities and stabilizers that have an impact on the dangerous classification of the substance, and the concentration or concentration range shall be listed.
If it is a mixture, it is not necessary to list all the components.
If the component is classified as dangerous according to GHS standard and its content exceeds the concentration limit, the name information, concentration or concentration range of the component shall be listed. For the identified hazardous components, the chemical names or generic names, concentrations or concentration ranges of those components identified as hazardous components should also be provided.
(4) First aid measures
This part should briefly describe the acute and delayed effects, main symptoms and main effects on health after exposure to chemicals, first aid measures to be taken when necessary and actions to be avoided.
If necessary, this item should include advice to protect rescuers and special tips to doctors, as well as timely medical care and special treatment.
(5) Fire control measures
This part should explain the appropriate fire extinguishing method and extinguishing agent, and if there is any unsuitable extinguishing agent, it should also be indicated here.
The special dangers of chemicals (such as dangerous flammable products), special fire extinguishing methods and special protective equipment to protect firefighters should be marked.
(6) Emergency treatment of leakage
It refers to simple and effective emergency measures, precautions and elimination methods that can be adopted on site after chemical leakage, including: protective measures for operators, protective equipment and emergency disposal procedures, environmental protection measures, containment and removal methods of leaked chemicals, disposal materials used and preventive measures to prevent secondary hazards.
(7) Operation, disposal and storage
Operation and disposal —— Matters needing attention in safe disposal shall be described, including technical measures to prevent chemical personnel from contacting, fire and explosion, and technical measures to provide local or full ventilation and prevent the formation of aerosol and dust. Special handling precautions to prevent direct contact with incompatible substances or mixtures should also be included.
Storage —— It shall describe the conditions for safe storage (suitable storage conditions and unsuitable storage conditions), safety technical measures, measures for storage in isolation from prohibited compounds, and packaging material information (recommended packaging materials and non-recommended packaging materials).
(8) Contact control and personal protection
List allowable concentrations, such as occupational exposure limits or biological limits; Engineering control methods to reduce contact; Recommended personal protective equipment, such as respiratory system protection, hand protection and eye protection; Skin and body protection. The type and material of protective equipment shall be indicated.
If chemicals are dangerous only under certain special conditions, such as large quantity, high concentration, high temperature, high pressure, etc., special protective measures under these conditions should be marked.
(9) Physical and chemical characteristics
This part should provide the following information: the appearance and properties of chemicals, such as state, shape and color; Smell; PH value, and indicate the concentration; Melting point/freezing point; Boiling point, initial boiling point and boiling range; Flash point; Upper and lower combustion limits or explosion limits; Vapor pressure; Vapor density; Density/relative density; Solubility; N- octanol/water partition coefficient; Spontaneous combustion temperature; Decomposition temperature; When necessary, the determination method of data shall be provided.
(10) stability and reactivity
This section should describe the stability of chemicals and the dangerous reactions that may occur under specific conditions. For example: conditions to be avoided (such as static electricity, impact or vibration); Incompatible substances; Dangerous decomposition products except carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide and water.
(1 1) Toxicological information
This section describes various toxic effects (health effects) caused by users' exposure to chemicals. It should include: acute toxicity; Skin irritation or corrosion; Eye irritation or corrosion; Respiratory or skin allergy; Germ cell mutation; Carcinogenicity; Reproductive toxicity; Specific target organ systemic toxicity-one-time contact; Specific target organ systemic toxicity-repeated exposure; Inhalation hazard. The potential harmful effects should include the symptoms, physical and chemical characteristics and toxicological characteristics observed by testing the toxicity value (such as the estimated acute toxicity value).
(12) ecological information
This part provides information on the environmental impact, environmental behavior and fate of chemicals, such as: expected behavior of chemicals in the environment, possible environmental impact/ecotoxicity; Persistence and degradability; Potential bioaccumulation; Mobility in soil.
(13) Abandoned disposal
This section includes the information on the recommended disposal methods for safety and environmental protection. These disposal methods are applicable to chemicals (residual wastes) and any contaminated containers and packaging.
(14) transport letter