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INTRODUCTION

Good afternoon everyone. I am John Kevin San Jose, and here are my groupmates Jeric Inocencio and
Kenneth Contreras and we are group 2. So today we will discuss four topics namely Chemical Safety,
Benzene, Hydrogen Sulfide, and Material Safety Data Sheet.

CHEMICAL SAFETY
Before working on anything, we must ensure our safety, and that hazards are minimized or best,
eliminated. Most especially on working with chemicals, a splash can burn your skin, and worse, one wromg
inhale and youre dead.
SLIDE 1: IMPORTANCE OF CHEMICAL SAFETY
So first up, I want to ask you What is the Importance of Chemical Safety?. Anyone?
First, it ensures that we are working with negligible level of chemical exposure. Be it fumes or liquids. It
doesnt necessarily mean that all the vapors are gone or eliminated, but the level is already at acceptable
conditions.
Second would be to reduce the probability of an accident. Before working, we should anticipate what are
the hazards and what corrective actions that can be done to prevent those hazards from happening.
And last is to reduce the potential consequences.
SLIDE 2: RISK ASSESMENT
A chemical risk assessment follows the same steps as a risk assessment for any other hazards in your
workplace. There are three basic steps:
1. Identify the hazard: This involves identifying the chemicals you have in your workplace and the
hazards associated with them.
2. Assess the risk: This involves assessing the risk from chemicals or processes in your workplace.
3. Control the exposure: This involves considering the various recognized control measures to
eliminate or reduce the risk.
SLIDE 3: EMPLOYERS AND EMPLOYEES
Employers are required to:

Determine which hazardous substances are present in the workplace.


Assess the risks to employees and others from the presence of these hazardous substances.
Prevent or control exposure to the hazardous substances to as low a level as is reasonably
practicable.
Have arrangements in place to deal with accidents, incidents and emergencies.

Provide information, training and consultation to employees.


Make available health surveillance to employees.

Employees also have duties. They must:

Co-operate with their employer e.g. follow procedures.


Make full and proper use of control measures e.g. using extract ventilation where provided, and
report any defects.
Report any defects in plant/ equipment immediately to the employer as appropriate.
Report any accident or incident which may have resulted in the release of a dangerous
chemical/substance into the workplace.

SLIDE 4: HOW CHEMICALS ENTER THE BODY


Chemicals are present in every workplace. Even in the cleanest, most modern office, employees may be
routinely exposed to inks, toners and adhesives not to mention a wide range of chemicals used in cleaning
and maintenance.
Chemicals can exist in many forms:

Dust, fumes, fibres, powders.


Liquids.
Gases, vapours, mists.

Chemicals can cause many different types of harm, ranging from mild skin irritation to cancer. The effects
of hazardous chemicals may be seen immediately after contact, or following a single short exposure.
Therefore, it is important to minimise exposure to chemicals at all times.
In order for a chemical to be hazardous to a persons health, it must either be in contact with or enter the
body.
There are four ways chemicals can enter the body:

Inhalation: Breathing in contaminated air is the most common way that workplace chemicals enter
the body.
Contact with the skin or eyes: Some chemicals can damage the skin or eyes (e.g. irritation) or
pass through the skin into the body.
Ingestion: Workplace chemicals may be swallowed accidentally if food or hands are
contaminated.
Injection: Injection can occur when a sharp object (e.g. needle) punctures the skin and injects a
chemical directly into the bloodstream.

SLIDE 5: HOW CHEMICALS AFFECT OUR BODY?


Here are some examples of how chemicals can affect the body.
Effects on brain and nervous system For example, exposure to pesticides, mercury, lead, solvents, carbon
monoxide gas.
Eye, nose and throat irritation (dryness, soreness or pain) For example, Exposure to acid mists and
vapours, welding fumes or diesel exhaust.
Effects on the lung Lung damage due to asbestos (lung cancer), welding fume (chronic obstructive
pulmonary disease). Irritant induced asthma For example acids (burn effect on airways). Allergic asthma
For example flour dust, isocyanate (in 2-pack paints), wood dust.
Liver damage For example, exposure to vinyl chloride.
Bladder damage For example, exposure to some azo dyes (bladder cancer).
Effects on skin Allergic contact dermatitis due to nickel, latex, chromate (found in some cements). Irritant
contact dermatitis because of solvents, detergents, oils, lubricants.
Effects on blood and bone marrow For example, Exposure to benzene in petrol fumes (anaemia and
leukaemia).
SLIDE 6: HAZARDOUS CHEMICALS IN THE REFINERY
SLIDE 15: FIRE DIAMOND

"NFPA 704: Standard System for the Identification of the Hazards of Materials for Emergency
Response" is a standard maintained by the U.S.-based National Fire Protection Association.
First "tentatively adopted as a guide" in 1960, and revised several times since then, it defines the
colloquial "fire diamond" used by emergency personnel to quickly and easily identify the risks
posed by hazardous materials.
This helps determine what, if any, special equipment should be used, procedures followed, or
precautions taken during the initial stages of an emergency response.

The four divisions are typically color-coded with red indicating flammability, blue indicating level of health
hazard, yellow for chemical reactivity, and white containing codes for special hazards.
Each of health, flammability and reactivity is rated on a scale from 0 (no hazard) to 4 (severe risk). The
numeric values are designated in the standard by "Degree of Hazard" using Arabic numerals (1, 2, 3, 4)

FLAMMABILITY
Materials that will not burn under typical fire conditions TO Will rapidly or completely vaporize at normal
atmospheric pressure and temperature.
HEALTH
Poses no health hazard TO Very short exposure could cause death or major residual injury.
REACTIVITY
Normally stable TO Readily capable of detonation or explosive decomposition at normal temperatures and
pressures.
SPECIAL NOTICE

OX Oxidizer
W Reacts with water in unusal manner
SA simple asphyxiant
COR Corrosive
BIO Biological Hazard
POI Poisonous
RAD Radioactive
CRYO Cryogenic

HYDROGEN SULFIDE
SLIDE 1: WHAT IS HYDROGEN SULFIDE?
So what is this infamous Hydrogen Sulfide? What is it made of? And why it can kill you in an instant?
Hydrogen Sulfide is a chemical compound made of one sulphur atom and two hydrogen atoms.
Hydrogen sulphide is a naturally occurring compound present in natural gas, crude oil, volcanic eruption,
hot spring, decaying organic matter. Here in PBR, the sulphur present in the crude is recovered at SRUs to
prevent the formation of H2S. H2S can also be present on confined spaces, and areas where there is a low
concentration of oxygen like swamps, sewers, and polluted waters.
SLIDE 2: CHARACTERISTICS OF HYDROGEN SULFIDE
Hydrogen sulfide is a colorless gas with the characteristic foul odor of rotten eggs; it is heavier than air,
soluble I most organic liquids, and very poisonous, corrosive, flammable, and explosive.
It has a boiling point of -60.7oC and has a melting point of -85.5oC. Its atomic mass os 34.08 g/mol and
has a density of 1.393 g/L.
SLIDE 3: HAZARDS OF H2S

Acidic solutions with H2S maycause skin and eye irritation


Compressed H2S gas may cause frostbite upon skin contact
Very toxic. May be fatal if inhaled

SLIDE 4:
Hydrogen sulfide is considered a broad-spectrum poison, meaning that it can poison several different
systems in the body, although the nervous system is most affected. The toxicity of H2S is comparable with
that of carbon monoxide. It forms a complex bond with iron in the mitochondrial cytochrome enzymes, thus
preventing cellular respiration.
Since hydrogen sulfide occurs naturally in the body, the environment and the gut, enzymes exist in the
body capable of detoxifying it by oxidation to (harmless) sulfate. Hence, low levels of hydrogen sulfide may
be tolerated indefinitely.
At some threshold level, believed to average around 300350 ppm, the oxidative enzymes become
overwhelmed. Many personal safety gas detectors, such as those used by utility, sewage and
petrochemical workers, are set to alarm at as low as 5 to 10 ppm and to go into high alarm at 15 ppm.

Exposure to lower concentrations can result in eye irritation, a sore throat and cough, nausea, shortness of
breath, and fluid in the lungs (pulmonary edema). These effects are believed to be due to the fact that
hydrogen sulfide combines with alkali present in moist surface tissues to form sodium sulfide, a caustic.
These symptoms usually go away in a few weeks.
Long-term, low-level exposure may result in fatigue, loss of appetite, headaches, irritability, poor memory,
and dizziness. Chronic exposure to low level H2S (around 2 ppm) has been implicated in increased
miscarriage and reproductive health issues.
Short-term, high-level exposure can induce immediate collapse, with loss of breathing and a high
probability of death. If death does not occur, high exposure to hydrogen sulfide can lead to cortical
pseudolaminar necrosis, degeneration of the basal ganglia and cerebral edema. Although respiratory
paralysis may be immediate, it can also be delayed up to 72 hours.

SLIDE 6 AND 7: EXPOSURE LIMITS


OSHA established exposure limits to hydrogen sulphide.
The Permissive Eposure Limit or PEL is at 10ppm, based on 8 hour-day per 5 day work week.
While the Short-Term Exposure Limit is at 15 ppm on a 15 minute work period.

SLIDE 8 : SAFETY CONTROL AND EQUIPMENT


We can prevent inhaling hydrogen sulphide by establishing different safety control and equipment.
The first one is the

Fixed Monitor and Safety Alarm


Portable Monitors
Gas sacks
Proper PPEs like SCBA
Natural and Mechanical Ventilation

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