M S D S: Aterial Afety ATA Heet
M S D S: Aterial Afety ATA Heet
M S D S: Aterial Afety ATA Heet
May be used to comply with Oshas Hazard Communication Standard, 29 CFR 1910.1200. Standard must be consulted for specific requirements. U.S. Department of Labour Occupational Safety and Health Administration (Non-Mandatory Form) Form Approved OMB No. 1218-0072
Maybe used to comply with Council Directive 93/112/EC concerning Council Directive 91/155/EEC relating to the classification, packaging and labelling of dangerous substances, referenced in the Official Journal of the European Communities, European Regulation L 314/38
Blank spaces are not permitted. If any item is not applicable, or no information is available, the space must be marked to indicate that.
Section I Identification
Product: UTP 64 AWS or Other Spec: E502-15
Telephone number for information: Signature of preparer: Product Type: Shielded Metal Arc Welding Electrode Suppliers name: BHLER Welding Austria GmbH Address: Bhler Welding St. 1, 8605 Kapfenberg, Austria, Europe Date prepared: 10/97 Austria +43 3862 301 260 Dr. W. Berger
Carbon (C) Chromium (Cr) Cobalt (Co) Copper (Cu) Iron (Fe) Manganese (Mn) Molybdenum (Mo) Nickel (Ni) Alkali Fluoride Earth Alkali Carbonate
7440-44-0 7440-47-3 7440-48-4 7440-50-8 7439-89-6 7439-96-5 7439-98-7 7440-02-0 N/R 471-34-1
Iron Carbon Poor Iron Oxide Iron II Oxide Iron Oxide Fume Iron Powder
Kaolin
1332-58-7
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Lead Lithium Fluoride Lithium-Potassium Feldspar Magnesium (Mg) Magnesium Oxide Magnesium Oxide Fume Manganese (Mn) Manganese & Iron Carbonate Manganese Aluminium Oxide Manganese Carbonate Manganese Fume Metal Oxides Metal Salt Chlorides
7432-92-1 7789-24-4 68476-25-5 7439-95-4 1309-48-4 1309-48-4 7439-96-5 N/R 11137-88-7 N/R 7439-96-5 1309-37-1 N/R
TWA 0.05 TWA 2.5 TWA 0.025 TWA 15.0 TWA 15.0 TWA 15.0 TWA 5.0 ceiling TWA 10.0 TWA 5.0 ceiling TWA 5.0 ceiling TWA 5.0 ceiling TWA 5.0 ceiling TWA 10.0 PEL based on heavy metal present TWA 5.0 soluble compounds TWA 15.0 total dust TWA 5.0 respirable fraction TWA 15.0 total dust TWA 1.0 TWA 1.0
TWA 0.05; A3; BEI TWA 2.5; A4; BEI TWA 0.025 TWA 10.0 TWA 10.0 TWA 10:0 TWA 0.2 TWA 5.0 inhalable fraction TWA 0.2 TWA 0.2 TWA 5.0 TWA 0.2 TWA 0.2 TWA 5.0 inhalable fraction TLV based on heavy metal present A3
Molybdenum (Mo)
7439-98-7
Ozone Paraffin Oil Phosphorous Black Phosphorous Red Phosphorous White Polyamide II Potassium Feldspar
Potassium Hydroxide
1310-56-3
Potassium Oxalate
6487-48-5
12136-47-7
Potassium Silicate
1312-76-1
TWA 10.0 inhalable fraction TWA 3.0 respirable fraction TWA 1.5 TWA 1.5 TWA 10.0 inhalable fraction N/R TWA 3.0 respirable fraction TWA 2ppm 5.2 TWA 5.0 STEL 4ppm 10 No limits No limits TWA 3ppm; 5.6 Ceiling 5ppm mg/m 9mg/m STEL 5ppm; 9.4 mg/m Light work TWA 0.10ppm TWA 0.1ppm 0.2 Heavy work TWA 0.05 ppm N/R 2.0 TWA 0.02ppm TWA 0.1 0.1 TWA 0.02ppm TWA 0.1 0.1 TWA 0.02ppm TWA 0.1 0.1 No PEL established No TLV established TWA 5.0 respirable fraction TWA 2.0 TWA 15.0 total dust STEL 2.0 ceiling N/R value TWA 5.0 respirable TWA 10.0 inhalable fraction fraction TWA 15.0 total TWA 3.0 respirable dust fraction TWA 5.0 respirable TWA 10.0 inhalable fraction fraction TWA 15.0 total TWA 3.0 respirable dust fraction TWA 5.0 respirable TWA 10.0 inhalable fraction fraction TWA 15.0 total TWA 3.0 respirable dust fraction
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Potassium Titanate
12030-97-6
Quartz (Silicon Dioxide SiO2) Resin Rutile Silicate Dioxide & Silicates
7631-86-9 7699-41-4
Silicon (Si) Silver (Ag) Sodium Alginate Sodium Aluminum Fluoride Sodium Ferrocyanide Sodium Fluorid (NaF) Sodium Oxide (Na2O) Sodium Potassium Oxide Sodium Silicate Sodium Tetraborate Sodium Tetraborate Hydrate Strontium Carbonate Sulfur (S) Sulphurized Alcohol Tantalium (Ta) Tin (Sn) Tin Oxide Titanium (Ti) Titanium Dioxide (Rutile) Titanium Oxide
7440-21-3 7440-22-4 9005-38-3 15096-52-3 N/R 7681-49-4 1313-59-3 N/R 6834-92-0 1330-43-4 1303-96-4 1633-05-02 7704-34-9 N/R 7440-25-7 7440-31-5 21651-19-4 7440-32-6 1317-80-2 N/R
TWA 5.0 respirable fraction TWA 15.0 total dust TWA (10)/%SiO2+2 respirable TWA (30)/%SiO2+2 total dust N/R TWA 15.0 TWA (10) / % SiO2 + 2 respirable dust (30) / % SiO2 + 2 TWA total dust TWA 20mppcf ; (80) / % SiO2 TWA 20mppcf ; (80) / % SiO2 TWA 5.0 respirable fraction TWA 15.0 total dust TWA 0.01 N/R TWA 2.0 TWA 5.0 respirable fraction TWA 15.0 total dust 2.5 TWA 5.0 respirable fraction TWA 15.0 total dust No PEL established TWA N/R N/R N/R TWA 5ppm 13 N/R TWA 5.0 respirable fraction TWA 2.0 N/R TWA 15.0 total dust TWA 15.0 total dust TWA 15.0 total dust TWA 15.0 total dust TWA 5.0 respirable fraction TWA15.0 total dust TWA 5.0 respirable fraction TWA 0.1 fume, ceiling limit TWA 0.5 resp. dust, ceiling limit TWA 0.1 fume, ceiling limit TWA 0.5 resp. dust, ceiling limit N/R
TWA 10.0 inhalable fraction TWA 3.0 respirable fraction TWA 0.05 respirable fraction; A2 N/R TWA 10.0 TWA 0.05 respirable fraction TWA 2.0 TWA 10.0
TWA 10.0 TWA 0.1 N/R TWA 2.0 TWA 5.0 2.5 TWA 10.0 inhalable fraction TWA 3.0 respirable fraction No TLV established TWA 10.0 TWA 1.0 TWA 1.0 N/R TWA 2ppm 5.2 STEL 5ppm 13 N/R TWA 5.0 TWA 2.0 TWA 2.0 TWA 10.0 TWA 10.0 TWA 10.0 TWA 5.0 STEL10.0 TWA 5; STEL 10 Involuble TWA 1; STEL 3 Soluble TWA 0.05 respirable fraction, BEI TWA 0.05 respirable fraction, BEI dust or fume N/R
Tungsten (T)
7439-89-6
Tungsten Carbide
12070-12-1
Vanadium (V)
7440-62-2
7440-62-2 N/R
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Zinc (Zn)
7440-66-6
TWA15.0 total dust TWA 5.0 respirable fraction TWA 1.0 TWA 5.0 TWA 5.0 TWA 5.0 TWA 5.0 TWA 5.0 TWA 5.0
Zinc Chloride Fume Zinc Oxide Fume Zirconium-Calium Oxide Zirconium Compounds Zirconium-Magnesium Oxide Zirconium Oxide Zirconium Silicate
*
TWA 5.0; STEL 10 fume TWA 10.0 inhalable fraction dust TWA 1.0 STEL 2.0 TWA 5.0 STEL 10.0 TWA 5.0 STEL 10.0 TWA 5.0 STEL 10.0 TWA 5.0 STEL 10.0 TWA 5.0 STEL 10.0 TWA 5.0 STEL 10.0
The term Hazardous in Hazardous Ingredients should be interpreted as a term required and defined in the OSHA Hazard Communication Standard (29 CFR Part 1910.1200) and does not necessarily imply the existence of any hazard. A1 Listed by ACGIH as a Human Carcinogen A2 Listed by ACGIH as a Suspected Human Carcinogen A3 Listed by ACGIH as an Animal Carcinogen C Listed by OSHA as a Human Carcinogen N/R Not reported or listed mppcf Million Particles per Cubic Foot BEI Listed by ACGIH as a substance for which there are biological exposure indices
WARNING: WARNING:
This product contains or produces a chemical known to the state of California to cause cancer. This product contains or produces a chemical known to the state of California to cause birth defects or other reproductive harm. IMPORTANT: This section covers the material from which this product is manufactured. The fumes and gases produced during welding with this product are covered by SECTION VI.
insoluble Unalloyed and low alloyed basic coated electrodes are welding consumables consisting of a solid core wire and a gray coating, no specific odor
Conditions to avoid
N/A
Incompatibility (Materials to avoid): N/A Hazardous Decomposition or By-products: Important: Welding fumes and gases cannot be classified simply. The composition and quantity of both are dependent
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upon the metal being welded, and the process, procedures, and electrodes used. Other conditions which also influence the composition and quantity of the fumes and gases to which workers may be exposed include: coatings on the metal being welded (such as paint, plating, galvanising, or phosphate coatings on steels which would produce phosphine gas), the number of welders and the volume of the work area, the quality and amount of ventilation, the position of the welders head with respect to the fume plume as well as the presence of contaminants in the atmosphere (such as chlorinated hydrocarbon vapours from cleaning and degreasing activities which may be decomposed by the arc into toxic gases such as phosgene). When the electrode is consumed, the fume and gas decomposition products generated are different in percent and form from the ingredients listed in SECTION II. Fume and gas decomposition products, and not the ingredients in the electrode are important. The concentration of a given fume or gas component may decrease or increase by many times the original concentration in the electrode. Also, new compounds not in the electrodes may form. Decomposition products of normal operation include those originating from the volatilization, reaction, or oxidation of the materials shown in SECTION II, plus those from the base metal and coating, etc..., as noted above. Reasonably expected fume constituents of this product would include: Example for Carbon dioxide shielded flux-cored electrode (AWS 5.20 E70-T-1): Reasonably expected fume constituents of this product would include: primarily oxides of Iron; secondarily complex oxides of Manganese, Silicon, Titanium and Sodium. The present ACGIH TLV for Manganese, 0.2 mg/m3 will result in a significant reduction from the 5 mg/m3 general welding fume (NOC) level. Example for Stainless Steel covered electrodes (AWS 5.4): Reasonably expected fume constituents of this product would include: primarily fluorides and complex oxides of Iron and Silicon, secondarily complex oxides of Manganese, titanium, chromium, nickel, sodium and potassium. The present 1995 OSHA PEL (Permissible Exposure Limit) for hexavalent Chromium (Cr +6) is 0.05 mg/m3 which will result in a significant reduction from the 5 mg/m3 general welding fume (NOC) level. The limit of 0.05 mg/m3 for hexavalent chromium from the decomposition products in these electrodes comes from the limit shown at the bottom of OSHA Table Z-2, which is for 0.1 mg of CrO3- which calculates to 0.05 mg of Cr+6/m3. It applies to soluble chromates of the types found in covered stainless electrode fumes. Reasonably expected gaseous constituents would include Carbon monoxide and Carbon dioxide. Ozone and nitrogen oxides may be formed by the radiation from the arc. One recommended way to determine the composition and quantity of fumes and gases to which workers are exposed is to take an air sample from inside the welder's helmet if worn or in the worker's breathing zone. See ANSI/AWS F1.1 and ANSI/AWS F1.2-1992 Hazardous/Polymerisation May occur Will not occur
Conditions to avoid
N/A
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Carcinogenicity NICKEL: The International Agency for Research on Cancer indicates nickel refining and "certain nickel compounds" were cancer-causing, but could not state with certainty which forms of nickel may be carcinogenic. The National Toxicology Program lists nickel powder, nickel subsulfide, nickel oxide, nickel carbonate, nickel carbonyl and nickelocene as substances "that may reasonably anticipated to be carcinogens." Because of this, the OSHA Hazard Communication Standard requires that everyone who manufactures or imports these substances or mixtures or alloys containing these substances must warn of a cancer hazard on their MSDS's and labels. This warning is mandated by OSHA even though studies have not demonstrated cancer risks associated with the use of nickel. Intramuscular injection and implantation of nickel powder produced localized tumors in rats and mice. Inhalation studies using animals showed no evidence of carcinogenicity. CHROMIUM: The International Agency for Research on Cancer and The National Toxicology Program indicates there is sufficient evidence for carcinogenicity of chromium compounds both in humans and experimental animals. IARC notes that "the compounds responsible for the carcinogenic effect in humans cannot be specified." Studies with chromium metal and trivalent forms of chromium compounds have shown inadequate evidence for carcinogenicity in both animals and humans. CRYSTALLINE SILICA: The National Toxicology Program indicates there is sufficient evidence for the carcinogenicity or respirable crystalline silica in experimental animals. Increases in incidence of lung cancers have been found in inhalation studies in rats. An IARC working group reported there is limited evidence for the carcinogenicity of crystalline silica in humans. Sign and symptoms of exposure: Short term exposure to welding fumes may result in discomfort, dizziness, nausea, or dryness or irritation of the throat. Medical conditions generally aggravated by exposure: Individuals with impaired pulmonary functions or illness my have symptoms exacerbated by fume irritants. Emergency and first aid procedures: Remove from dust or fume exposure. If breathing has stopped perform artificial respiration. Summon medical aid immediately.
REFERENCED STANDARDS
In this publication, reference is made to the standards listed below. Copies are available from the indicated sources. Official Journals of the European Communities L 314/38, L174/54, referencing Council Regulations 93/112/EC, 91/155/EEC, 88/379/EEC and 67/548/EEC American Welding Society, Inc. 550 N.W. LeJeune Road Miami, FL 33126 Methods for Sampling Airborne AWS F1.1-1992 Particulates Generated by Welding and Allied Processes Laboratory Method for Measuring AWS F1.2-1992 Fume Generation Rates and Total Fume Emission for Welding and Allied Processes American National Standards Institute 11 West 42nd Street New York, NY 10036 ANSI Z49.1-1994 Safety in Welding, Cutting and Allied Processes Superintendent of Documents Administration U.S. Government Printing Office Washington, DC 20402
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OSHA Standard 29 CFR 1910 Toxic and Hazardous Substances Subpart Z 1910.1000 Air Contaminants Table Z-2 U.S. Department of Labor Occupational Safety and Health Administration 200 Constitution Avenue Room N-3101 Washington, DC 20210 OSHA Standard 29 CFR Material Safety Data Sheet (Non-Mandatory Form) 1910.1200 Environmental Protection Agency 401 M Street, S.W.
Washington, DC 20460 Sections 311, 312, 313 Emergency Planning and Community Right-To-Know Act of 1986 (EPCRA) American Conferencel of Governmental Industrial Hygienists Technical Affairs Office Kemper Woods Center 1330 Kemper Meadow Drive Cincinnati, OH 45240 Threshold Limit Values (TLVs) for Chemical Substances and Physical Agents and Biological Exposure Indices (BEIs)
The information of this MSDS was obtained from sources we believe are reliable. However, this information is provided without any representation of warranty, expressed or implied, regarding accuracy or correctness.
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