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Episode 9 - Safety Data Sheets - Physical and Chemical Properties
Episode 9

Episode 9 - Safety Data Sheets - Physical and Chemical Properties

The Occupational Safety Leadership Podcast

November 6, 20225m 6s

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Show Notes

Episode 9 dives into Section 9 of the Safety Data Sheet (SDS) — the Physical and Chemical Properties section. Dr. Ayers explains that while many people skim this part, it contains some of the most important information for hazard recognition, emergency response, and safe handling of chemicals.

The core message: Section 9 tells you how a chemical behaves — and understanding that behavior prevents fires, exposures, and unexpected reactions.

  🧪 Why Section 9 Matters

This section helps workers and safety leaders understand:

  • How a chemical will act in real‑world conditions

  • Whether it evaporates quickly

  • Whether it can ignite easily

  • Whether it sinks or rises in air

  • How it reacts with heat, water, or other chemicals

These properties directly influence storage, ventilation, PPE, and emergency planning.

  📄 Key Physical & Chemical Properties Explained

Dr. Ayers highlights the most important properties in Section 9 and why they matter:

  🔥 Flash Point

The temperature at which a chemical can ignite.

Why it matters:

  • Determines fire risk

  • Helps classify flammable vs. combustible liquids

  • Guides storage and hot‑work precautions

  💨 Vapor Pressure

How easily a chemical becomes a vapor.

Why it matters:

  • High vapor pressure = more inhalation risk

  • Indicates how quickly a spill can become airborne

  🫧 Vapor Density

Whether vapors rise or sink.

Why it matters:

  • Heavy vapors (greater than 1) can accumulate in low areas

  • Influences ventilation and confined space hazards

  🌡️ Boiling Point

Temperature at which the chemical turns to vapor.

Why it matters:

  • Low boiling point = high volatility

  • Impacts flammability and inhalation risk

  💧 Solubility

How well the chemical dissolves in water.

Why it matters:

  • Affects cleanup methods

  • Determines whether water increases or decreases hazard

  🧊 Specific Gravity

Whether the chemical floats or sinks in water.

Why it matters:

  • Critical for spill response

  • Helps predict environmental behavior

  🧪 pH

Acidity or alkalinity.

Why it matters:

  • Extreme pH = corrosive

  • Influences PPE selection and emergency response

  🧯 Auto‑Ignition Temperature

Temperature at which the chemical ignites without a spark.

Why it matters:

  • Important for hot surfaces, heaters, and equipment

  🧭 Common Mistakes Workers Make

Dr. Ayers calls out several issues:

  • Skipping Section 9 entirely

  • Assuming all flammable liquids behave the same

  • Not understanding vapor density and confined space risks

  • Using the wrong cleanup method because solubility wasn’t checked

  • Underestimating inhalation hazards from high‑vapor‑pressure chemicals

These oversights lead to preventable incidents.

  🧰 How Leaders Should Use Section 9
  • Train workers to read SDSs beyond the hazard pictograms

  • Use Section 9 to guide storage, ventilation, and PPE decisions

  • Incorporate physical/chemical properties into JHAs and pre‑task briefings

  • Ensure emergency responders understand vapor behavior and flash points

  • Reinforce that SDSs are practical tools, not paperwork

  🧑‍🏫 Leadership Takeaways
  • Section 9 is essential for understanding how chemicals behave

  • Physical and chemical properties drive real‑world risk

  • Workers need simple, practical training on what these terms mean

  • Better understanding leads to better decisions and fewer incidents

The episode’s core message: Knowing a chemical’s properties is the key to predicting — and preventing — dangerous situations.