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  3. Yesterday... I found a open bottle of old and empty but with residue liquid 60% perchloric acid in the laminar flow bench....

Yesterday... I found a open bottle of old and empty but with residue liquid 60% perchloric acid in the laminar flow bench....

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved General Medicine
laboratoryheidelbergmedicinekaboomchemistry
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  • Birk MaroldB This user is from outside of this forum
    Birk MaroldB This user is from outside of this forum
    Birk Marold
    wrote last edited by
    #1

    Yesterday... I found a open bottle of old and empty but with residue liquid 60% perchloric acid in the laminar flow bench....

    Here it comes...

    With the opened by date from the year "2020"on it!

    Fucking bottle stood open in the bench for 6 god damn years.
    Salt crust at the top.

    I really don't know what the fuck is wrong with people in the lab🤯

    #laboratory #heidelberg #medicine #kaboom #chemistry #science

    Getzler Lab at KenyonCollegeG Jenn, blobby goblinT 2 Replies Last reply
    1
    0
    • #medicineT #medicine shared this topic
    • Birk MaroldB Birk Marold

      Yesterday... I found a open bottle of old and empty but with residue liquid 60% perchloric acid in the laminar flow bench....

      Here it comes...

      With the opened by date from the year "2020"on it!

      Fucking bottle stood open in the bench for 6 god damn years.
      Salt crust at the top.

      I really don't know what the fuck is wrong with people in the lab🤯

      #laboratory #heidelberg #medicine #kaboom #chemistry #science

      Getzler Lab at KenyonCollegeG This user is from outside of this forum
      Getzler Lab at KenyonCollegeG This user is from outside of this forum
      Getzler Lab at KenyonCollege
      wrote last edited by
      #2

      @Birk_lab scratc scary! is it a perchlorate-rated hood? My understanding is that you can also get dangerous accumulation in the ducts.

      Jenn, blobby goblinT 1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • Birk MaroldB Birk Marold

        Yesterday... I found a open bottle of old and empty but with residue liquid 60% perchloric acid in the laminar flow bench....

        Here it comes...

        With the opened by date from the year "2020"on it!

        Fucking bottle stood open in the bench for 6 god damn years.
        Salt crust at the top.

        I really don't know what the fuck is wrong with people in the lab🤯

        #laboratory #heidelberg #medicine #kaboom #chemistry #science

        Jenn, blobby goblinT This user is from outside of this forum
        Jenn, blobby goblinT This user is from outside of this forum
        Jenn, blobby goblin
        wrote last edited by
        #3

        @Birk_lab sounds like you work with the people I used to work with 🫠 once found a bottle of diethyl ether, opened, white crust about the neck, in the back of the storage cabinet. Bright black text: OPENED APRIL 2004.

        It was August 2012.

        1 Reply Last reply
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        • Getzler Lab at KenyonCollegeG Getzler Lab at KenyonCollege

          @Birk_lab scratc scary! is it a perchlorate-rated hood? My understanding is that you can also get dangerous accumulation in the ducts.

          Jenn, blobby goblinT This user is from outside of this forum
          Jenn, blobby goblinT This user is from outside of this forum
          Jenn, blobby goblin
          wrote last edited by
          #4

          @GetzlerChem considering how laminar flow hoods work, are there any rated as safe for perchloric?? @Birk_lab

          Getzler Lab at KenyonCollegeG Sam LevineS 2 Replies Last reply
          0
          • Jenn, blobby goblinT Jenn, blobby goblin

            @GetzlerChem considering how laminar flow hoods work, are there any rated as safe for perchloric?? @Birk_lab

            Getzler Lab at KenyonCollegeG This user is from outside of this forum
            Getzler Lab at KenyonCollegeG This user is from outside of this forum
            Getzler Lab at KenyonCollege
            wrote last edited by
            #5

            @titania @Birk_lab I have no idea. I just remember ClO4- salts being something that many pretty otherwise bold synthetic folks would try to avoid due to all the special extra engineering controls and those hoods being limited and in inconvenient locations. Mostly I was encountering it as a potentially non-coordinating anion, not a strong oxidizer, so there was rarely cause to go through the trouble and I didn’t learn beyond that

            Birk MaroldB 1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • Jenn, blobby goblinT Jenn, blobby goblin

              @GetzlerChem considering how laminar flow hoods work, are there any rated as safe for perchloric?? @Birk_lab

              Sam LevineS This user is from outside of this forum
              Sam LevineS This user is from outside of this forum
              Sam Levine
              wrote last edited by
              #6

              @titania @GetzlerChem @Birk_lab I was wondering the same thing!

              Getzler Lab at KenyonCollegeG 1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • Sam LevineS Sam Levine

                @titania @GetzlerChem @Birk_lab I was wondering the same thing!

                Getzler Lab at KenyonCollegeG This user is from outside of this forum
                Getzler Lab at KenyonCollegeG This user is from outside of this forum
                Getzler Lab at KenyonCollege
                wrote last edited by
                #7

                @SRLevine @titania this feels a little like maybe the way chemists get shocked by how geologists handle HF and artists handle paint thinner. I hope it doesn’t feel like a pile on! Just concerned that @Birk_lab stay as safe as possible!

                Sam LevineS 1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • Getzler Lab at KenyonCollegeG Getzler Lab at KenyonCollege

                  @SRLevine @titania this feels a little like maybe the way chemists get shocked by how geologists handle HF and artists handle paint thinner. I hope it doesn’t feel like a pile on! Just concerned that @Birk_lab stay as safe as possible!

                  Sam LevineS This user is from outside of this forum
                  Sam LevineS This user is from outside of this forum
                  Sam Levine
                  wrote last edited by
                  #8

                  @GetzlerChem @titania @Birk_lab We might also be having a terminology issue, the first time I ever used a tissue culture hood I was appalled because the air was blowing at me! Turns out the word hood covers a large variety of devices that move air in different patterns depending on the experiment, which blew my poor little chemistry brain.

                  Birk MaroldB 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • Getzler Lab at KenyonCollegeG Getzler Lab at KenyonCollege

                    @titania @Birk_lab I have no idea. I just remember ClO4- salts being something that many pretty otherwise bold synthetic folks would try to avoid due to all the special extra engineering controls and those hoods being limited and in inconvenient locations. Mostly I was encountering it as a potentially non-coordinating anion, not a strong oxidizer, so there was rarely cause to go through the trouble and I didn’t learn beyond that

                    Birk MaroldB This user is from outside of this forum
                    Birk MaroldB This user is from outside of this forum
                    Birk Marold
                    wrote last edited by
                    #9

                    @GetzlerChem @titania @SRLevine of course it's not a perchloric acid rated hood. Don't ask, I have no explanation other than people are stupid. I have been praying it down there for months directly after I started. Maybe it's Corona brain damage🤷

                    Also been saying for over 6 months that the reason the IS we use for LCMS has often a too high standard deviation from the calibration coz everybody Pipettes differently, of course they also do it wrong. The companies the LCMS are leased from are constantly there not figuring out why our deviation is often so high... But according to the group lead xD it wouldn't matter how you pipette xD

                    Perchloric acid hoods would use a water spray/ mist system to directly remove any perchlorates from the air I think.

                    Getzler Lab at KenyonCollegeG 1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • Sam LevineS Sam Levine

                      @GetzlerChem @titania @Birk_lab We might also be having a terminology issue, the first time I ever used a tissue culture hood I was appalled because the air was blowing at me! Turns out the word hood covers a large variety of devices that move air in different patterns depending on the experiment, which blew my poor little chemistry brain.

                      Birk MaroldB This user is from outside of this forum
                      Birk MaroldB This user is from outside of this forum
                      Birk Marold
                      wrote last edited by
                      #10

                      @SRLevine @GetzlerChem @titania no it's a chemistry hood, not a cell culture one.
                      XD having the 60% blown directly into you face xD

                      Jenn, blobby goblinT 1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • Birk MaroldB Birk Marold

                        @GetzlerChem @titania @SRLevine of course it's not a perchloric acid rated hood. Don't ask, I have no explanation other than people are stupid. I have been praying it down there for months directly after I started. Maybe it's Corona brain damage🤷

                        Also been saying for over 6 months that the reason the IS we use for LCMS has often a too high standard deviation from the calibration coz everybody Pipettes differently, of course they also do it wrong. The companies the LCMS are leased from are constantly there not figuring out why our deviation is often so high... But according to the group lead xD it wouldn't matter how you pipette xD

                        Perchloric acid hoods would use a water spray/ mist system to directly remove any perchlorates from the air I think.

                        Getzler Lab at KenyonCollegeG This user is from outside of this forum
                        Getzler Lab at KenyonCollegeG This user is from outside of this forum
                        Getzler Lab at KenyonCollege
                        wrote last edited by
                        #11

                        @Birk_lab @titania @SRLevine you have my sincere sympathy trying to sort this out. I assume there is not a particularly capable environmental health and safety office that can help out?

                        Birk MaroldB 1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • Birk MaroldB Birk Marold

                          @SRLevine @GetzlerChem @titania no it's a chemistry hood, not a cell culture one.
                          XD having the 60% blown directly into you face xD

                          Jenn, blobby goblinT This user is from outside of this forum
                          Jenn, blobby goblinT This user is from outside of this forum
                          Jenn, blobby goblin
                          wrote last edited by
                          #12

                          @Birk_lab I mean, I'm a chemist, was not using it for tissue work. Laminar flow hoods are a specific design that is supposed to reduce particulates on the bench...they're used in bio applications, sure, but the particulate control is important for semicon stuff too. Didn't blow toward my face but it does move air in such a way that I'd be surprised if they're rated for perchloric... 🤔

                          @SRLevine @GetzlerChem

                          Getzler Lab at KenyonCollegeG 1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • Jenn, blobby goblinT Jenn, blobby goblin

                            @Birk_lab I mean, I'm a chemist, was not using it for tissue work. Laminar flow hoods are a specific design that is supposed to reduce particulates on the bench...they're used in bio applications, sure, but the particulate control is important for semicon stuff too. Didn't blow toward my face but it does move air in such a way that I'd be surprised if they're rated for perchloric... 🤔

                            @SRLevine @GetzlerChem

                            Getzler Lab at KenyonCollegeG This user is from outside of this forum
                            Getzler Lab at KenyonCollegeG This user is from outside of this forum
                            Getzler Lab at KenyonCollege
                            wrote last edited by
                            #13

                            @titania @Birk_lab @SRLevine oh I've never thought of the particulate control aspect and applications to clean room settings. instantly makes sense, just was so hard-wired to think of laminar flow as control for biological contamination. which is, of course, effectively just particular particulates 😛

                            Birk MaroldB 1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • Getzler Lab at KenyonCollegeG Getzler Lab at KenyonCollege

                              @titania @Birk_lab @SRLevine oh I've never thought of the particulate control aspect and applications to clean room settings. instantly makes sense, just was so hard-wired to think of laminar flow as control for biological contamination. which is, of course, effectively just particular particulates 😛

                              Birk MaroldB This user is from outside of this forum
                              Birk MaroldB This user is from outside of this forum
                              Birk Marold
                              wrote last edited by
                              #14

                              @GetzlerChem @titania @SRLevine well it's curious. While in the USA every university seems to have very strict rules and requirements for perchloric acid, not in Germany though. Or at least I couldn't find any actual solid handling manual besides the standard SDS. But the SDS basically leave the handling open for interpretation. 🤷

                              Jenn, blobby goblinT 1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • Birk MaroldB Birk Marold

                                @GetzlerChem @titania @SRLevine well it's curious. While in the USA every university seems to have very strict rules and requirements for perchloric acid, not in Germany though. Or at least I couldn't find any actual solid handling manual besides the standard SDS. But the SDS basically leave the handling open for interpretation. 🤷

                                Jenn, blobby goblinT This user is from outside of this forum
                                Jenn, blobby goblinT This user is from outside of this forum
                                Jenn, blobby goblin
                                wrote last edited by
                                #15

                                @Birk_lab I don't think it's just the US, friends in Canada were also subject to similar rules re: perchloric (well, more like "guidelines", but since they're guidelines to prevent fire...yeah). having washdown capability is a pretty good idea if you're working with any significant amount. 🫠 doesn't sound as though your lab *was*, at least until they left it open to evaporate...? which, uh, yikes. @GetzlerChem @SRLevine

                                Birk MaroldB 1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • Getzler Lab at KenyonCollegeG Getzler Lab at KenyonCollege

                                  @Birk_lab @titania @SRLevine you have my sincere sympathy trying to sort this out. I assume there is not a particularly capable environmental health and safety office that can help out?

                                  Birk MaroldB This user is from outside of this forum
                                  Birk MaroldB This user is from outside of this forum
                                  Birk Marold
                                  wrote last edited by
                                  #16

                                  @GetzlerChem @titania @SRLevine well... It all flared up in January when I basically got blamed for everything going wrong there. I'm just a technical lab assistant there since September last year. I was asked by QM to point out things that go wrong in the lab coz they want to get accredited. Even contacted the workers council to get it recorded that I'm not to blame for any of it. Left me not caring after January but the find of the salty crusty opened bottle is kind of next level shit. Before I joined them they didn't even use the hood or any protection while working with it and they vortexed open vials while pipetting 10% perchloric into it. Sure, safer but still blew my mind.

                                  I think coz with an acid like concentrated sulfuric acid, you'd instantly see the effect and the danger of it while I understand perchloric is more dangerous, you don't instantly see it's effects directly.

                                  So to get them to use the hood I really had to annoy the prof. And QM while instead of being thankful I pointed that stuff out they are annoyed by it. I don't get where my error in my thinking is... Humans are stupid can't be always the answer.

                                  I could even anonymously blow the whistle even though of course it would be obvious it was me. But what should happen other than I piss off the prof?

                                  Same with the LCMS results, we so often are cheating with the QCs so they are below 20% deviation...I can't assess if it's medically problematic but technically my mind screams.

                                  Birk MaroldB Jenn, blobby goblinT 2 Replies Last reply
                                  0
                                  • Birk MaroldB Birk Marold

                                    @GetzlerChem @titania @SRLevine well... It all flared up in January when I basically got blamed for everything going wrong there. I'm just a technical lab assistant there since September last year. I was asked by QM to point out things that go wrong in the lab coz they want to get accredited. Even contacted the workers council to get it recorded that I'm not to blame for any of it. Left me not caring after January but the find of the salty crusty opened bottle is kind of next level shit. Before I joined them they didn't even use the hood or any protection while working with it and they vortexed open vials while pipetting 10% perchloric into it. Sure, safer but still blew my mind.

                                    I think coz with an acid like concentrated sulfuric acid, you'd instantly see the effect and the danger of it while I understand perchloric is more dangerous, you don't instantly see it's effects directly.

                                    So to get them to use the hood I really had to annoy the prof. And QM while instead of being thankful I pointed that stuff out they are annoyed by it. I don't get where my error in my thinking is... Humans are stupid can't be always the answer.

                                    I could even anonymously blow the whistle even though of course it would be obvious it was me. But what should happen other than I piss off the prof?

                                    Same with the LCMS results, we so often are cheating with the QCs so they are below 20% deviation...I can't assess if it's medically problematic but technically my mind screams.

                                    Birk MaroldB This user is from outside of this forum
                                    Birk MaroldB This user is from outside of this forum
                                    Birk Marold
                                    wrote last edited by
                                    #17

                                    @GetzlerChem @titania @SRLevine like when we have to use a system calibration from 3 weeks ago coz the other 6 done since then don't fit with the latest analysis.

                                    Jenn, blobby goblinT 1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • Birk MaroldB Birk Marold

                                      @GetzlerChem @titania @SRLevine like when we have to use a system calibration from 3 weeks ago coz the other 6 done since then don't fit with the latest analysis.

                                      Jenn, blobby goblinT This user is from outside of this forum
                                      Jenn, blobby goblinT This user is from outside of this forum
                                      Jenn, blobby goblin
                                      wrote last edited by
                                      #18

                                      @Birk_lab yeah I saw the line re: pipetting incorrectly. I worked with someone like that once. If they want to keep paying for someone to come out and check the machine, you can't stop them. If you were a postdoc or in a supervisory position I'd tell you to talk to the prof, but it sounds like it's not worth it. @GetzlerChem @SRLevine

                                      Birk MaroldB 1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • Jenn, blobby goblinT Jenn, blobby goblin

                                        @Birk_lab I don't think it's just the US, friends in Canada were also subject to similar rules re: perchloric (well, more like "guidelines", but since they're guidelines to prevent fire...yeah). having washdown capability is a pretty good idea if you're working with any significant amount. 🫠 doesn't sound as though your lab *was*, at least until they left it open to evaporate...? which, uh, yikes. @GetzlerChem @SRLevine

                                        Birk MaroldB This user is from outside of this forum
                                        Birk MaroldB This user is from outside of this forum
                                        Birk Marold
                                        wrote last edited by
                                        #19

                                        @titania @GetzlerChem @SRLevine yes apologies. Canadian universities also came up when I researched it. Not sure why I couldn't find something as clear in the EU 🤷

                                        Yes, yikes^^
                                        Also means that since the bottle was placed in it, nobody cleaned the bench fully.

                                        1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • Birk MaroldB Birk Marold

                                          @GetzlerChem @titania @SRLevine well... It all flared up in January when I basically got blamed for everything going wrong there. I'm just a technical lab assistant there since September last year. I was asked by QM to point out things that go wrong in the lab coz they want to get accredited. Even contacted the workers council to get it recorded that I'm not to blame for any of it. Left me not caring after January but the find of the salty crusty opened bottle is kind of next level shit. Before I joined them they didn't even use the hood or any protection while working with it and they vortexed open vials while pipetting 10% perchloric into it. Sure, safer but still blew my mind.

                                          I think coz with an acid like concentrated sulfuric acid, you'd instantly see the effect and the danger of it while I understand perchloric is more dangerous, you don't instantly see it's effects directly.

                                          So to get them to use the hood I really had to annoy the prof. And QM while instead of being thankful I pointed that stuff out they are annoyed by it. I don't get where my error in my thinking is... Humans are stupid can't be always the answer.

                                          I could even anonymously blow the whistle even though of course it would be obvious it was me. But what should happen other than I piss off the prof?

                                          Same with the LCMS results, we so often are cheating with the QCs so they are below 20% deviation...I can't assess if it's medically problematic but technically my mind screams.

                                          Jenn, blobby goblinT This user is from outside of this forum
                                          Jenn, blobby goblinT This user is from outside of this forum
                                          Jenn, blobby goblin
                                          wrote last edited by
                                          #20

                                          @Birk_lab also just like, H2SO4 is also an oxo acid...?

                                          God, I hope these people never work with nitric, having flashbacks to my best friend telling me about one of the physics students accidentally making nitroglycerine...

                                          Birk MaroldB 1 Reply Last reply
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