[NHCOLL-L:4054] RE: Fwd: [H&S] Fwd: Safe disposal of picric acid
Moore, Simon
simon.moore at hants.gov.uk
Thu Oct 30 13:00:00 EDT 2008
Hi James,
Picric acid was used as a primary fixative for certain tissues but was
normally compounded as Bouin's fixative or Dubosq-Brasil's fixative.
Not normally used on its own due to explosive nature!
With all good wishes,
Simon Moore, MIScT, FLS, ACR,
Senior Conservator of Natural Sciences.
Hampshire County Council
Recreation & Heritage Department,
Museums & Archives Service,
Chilcomb House, Chilcomb Lane,
Winchester SO23 8RD. UK.
Internal 8 327 6737
01962 826737
http://www.hants.gov.uk/museum/biology
________________________________
From: owner-nhcoll-l at lists.yale.edu
[mailto:owner-nhcoll-l at lists.yale.edu] On Behalf Of Bryant, James
Sent: 30 October 2008 15:36
To: CAHawks at aol.com; NHCOLL-L at lists.yale.edu
Subject: [NHCOLL-L:4050] RE: Fwd: [H&S] Fwd: Safe disposal of picric
acid
Thank you all for the background on this preservative. I'm curious as to
why picric acid was ever used? It's new to me.
James M. Bryant
Curator of Natural History
Museum Department, City of Riverside
3580 Mission Inn Avenue
Riverside, CA 92501
(951) 826-5273
(951) 369-4970 FAX
jbryant at riversideca.gov
________________________________
From: owner-nhcoll-l at lists.yale.edu
[mailto:owner-nhcoll-l at lists.yale.edu] On Behalf Of CAHawks at aol.com
Sent: Wednesday, October 29, 2008 5:33 PM
To: NHCOLL-L at lists.yale.edu
Subject: [NHCOLL-L:4048] Fwd: [H&S] Fwd: Safe disposal of picric acid
Catharine Hawks
Conservator
2419 Barbour Road
Falls Church VA 22043-3026 USA
t/f 703.876.9272
________________________________
From: BallardM at si.edu
Reply-to: aic-health at lists.stanford.edu
To: aic-health at lists.stanford.edu
Sent: 10/29/2008 9:58:15 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time
Subj: Re: [H&S] Fwd: [NHCOLL-L:4037] Safe disposal of picric
acid
Common name: Picric Acid
Color Index Name Acid Yellow (no number)
C.I. Constitution Number: 10305
Discovered by Woulfe, 1771.
Solubility: sparingly soluble in water (yellow); readily soluble
in ethanol.
Toxicity information From NISax et al. Dangerous Properties of
Industrial Materials 6th ed. 1984
Can cause allergic irritation as well as dermatitis. Sympoms of
systematic poisoning are nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, yellow
discoloration of skin & convulsions, as well as stupor, skin eruptions,
anemia, abdominal pain and oligeria
Explosion hazard: dangerous when shocked or exposed to heat.
Keep out of contact with metals. Forms unstable salts with concrete,
ammonia and bases. Picric acid is a more powerful explosive than TNT.
Disaster hazard: highly dangerous, shock will explode it on
decomposition it emits highly toxic fumes and explodes. Can react
vigorously with reducing materials.
If you want to know what it looks like it's 2,4,6
trinitrophenol.
Mary W. Ballard
Senior Textiles Conservator,
Museum Conservation Institute, Smithsonian Institution
4210 Silver Hill Road, Suitland MD 20746 U.S.A.
tel: 301-238-1210 fax: 301-238-3709
email ballardm at si.edu
________________________________
From: aic-health-bounces at lists.stanford.edu
[mailto:aic-health-bounces at lists.stanford.edu] On Behalf Of
CAHawks at aol.com
Sent: Tuesday, October 28, 2008 9:22 PM
To: aic-health at lists.Stanford.edu
Subject: [H&S] Fwd: [NHCOLL-L:4037] Safe disposal of picric acid
Catharine Hawks
Conservator
2419 Barbour Road
Falls Church VA 22043-3026 USA
t/f 703.876.9272
________________________________
From: Morris.Robert at saugov.sa.gov.au
To: NHCOLL-L at lists.yale.edu
Sent: 10/28/2008 3:52:59 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time
Subj: [NHCOLL-L:4037] Safe disposal of picric acid
Dear All,
We have a number of Helminth specimens housed in picric
acid solution that we would like to rebottle and store in a less
volatile medium. The specimens remain in solution but are housed in old
food jars with metal lids. This really is an OHS no no and one we need
to address before the safety auditors land on our doorsteps. Although
reasonably stable if left alone, our fear is that by trying to unscrew
the metal lids we may ignite the crystalline form that may have formed
on the underside of the lids.
One thought would be to immerse the jars in a water tank
and allow them to slowly fill with water before attempting to unscrew
the lids. Has anyone encountered this problem and if so what methods did
you adopt to safely extract specimens from picric acid solution?
Any advice would be appreciated
<file:///D:\My%20Documents\My%20Pictures\Email%20Logo.jpg> Robert Morris
Head of Collections
South Australian Museum
North Terrace, Adelaide SA 5000
Tel. +61 (0)8 82077455, Fax. +61 (0)8 82077222
www.samuseum.sa.gov.au <http://www.samuseum.sa.gov.au/>
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