SARA Title III: Intent and Implementation of Hazardous Materials RegulationsVan Nostrand Reinhold, 1990 - 279 pages SARA Title III is an important and far-reaching regulation on hazardous material that affects business, industry, government, and the community. This volume explains both the letter and the intent of the law and enables members of affected groups to more easily and effectively adapt their procedures and report forms to comply with the law. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR |
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Page 97
... GASES Because liquids evaporate , and the product of that evaporation is a vapor , there is usually some confusion between gases and vapors . There are three natural states of matter : gas , liquid , and solid . A natural state is the ...
... GASES Because liquids evaporate , and the product of that evaporation is a vapor , there is usually some confusion between gases and vapors . There are three natural states of matter : gas , liquid , and solid . A natural state is the ...
Page 98
... gases , which have boiling points below - 150 ° F , are kept in very well - insulated containers , and the liquids are so cold that there is very little pressure above them . Containers The hazardous property of all gases is that they ...
... gases , which have boiling points below - 150 ° F , are kept in very well - insulated containers , and the liquids are so cold that there is very little pressure above them . Containers The hazardous property of all gases is that they ...
Page 99
... gases that are dangerous over a prolonged exposure period , to that of poison A gases , which can kill after a few breaths ; hydrogen cyanide is an example of the latter . The toxicity of gases is an important property to know ; this ...
... gases that are dangerous over a prolonged exposure period , to that of poison A gases , which can kill after a few breaths ; hydrogen cyanide is an example of the latter . The toxicity of gases is an important property to know ; this ...
Contents
The Coming of SARA | 3 |
Impact of Legislation | 10 |
How Industry Should Comply with SARA | 21 |
Copyright | |
16 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
acid action activities addition Address Administrator agencies amount appropriate atoms cause committee complete compound concerning container Coordinator covered Designation determine districts effects emergency planning emergency response emergency response commission employees enter equipment established example existing explosive facility federal fire fire department flammable gases hazardous chemicals hazardous materials heat identify important incident indicate individual industry involved lead LEPC limit liquid Management manufacturer means method mixture necessary occur Office operator organic oxide person personnel prepared present pressure procedures produce protection quantity Reference regulations release reporting representatives request response plan result safety SARA SERC specific Standard subsection substance temperature Title toxic chemical trade secret transportation treatment United vapor waste