From: Kaspur3 <kaspur3**At_Symbol_Here**YAHOO.COM>
Subject: Re: [DCHAS-L] dry butyl lithium
Date: May 17, 2012 12:19:20 PM EDT
Reply-To: DCHAS-L <DCHAS-L**At_Symbol_Here**MED.CORNELL.EDU>
Message-ID: <6F431C2EE2F38D459F5DD28C5B9A10BC0C05E3E8**At_Symbol_Here**admin-fpm-exch1.fpm.wisc.edu>


Ellen,

You may want to look into whether your site has a license for 'waste treatment'.  Quenching for disposal is considered treatment above standard reaction quenching.

If your site will just lab pack everything for disposal, I recommend that you transfer the material in a secondary container to the area for disposal.  It will also alleviate the potential hazards with quenching the butyl lithium.

Mark

Sent from my iPhone

On May 17, 2012, at 6:37, =22CHANDRA, Tilak=22 <tchandra=40FPM.WISC.EDU> wrote:

<=21--=5Bif gte mso 9=5D> <=21=5Bendif=5D--><=21--=5Bif gte mso 9=5D> <=21=5Bendif=5D-->

Hi Ellen:

 

You can carefully decompose/destroy butyl lithium using isopropanol, if it is still active. You may take help from an experience chemist from Chemistry department. Dilute with an unreactive solvent such as heptane or toluene and place the bottle in an ice water cooling bath. Slowly add isopropanol to quench butyl lithium. Upon completion, add methanol as a more reactive quenching agent to ensure completion. Finally, add water drop-wise to make sure there are no pockets of reactive materials. Upon prolonged exposure to air butyl lithium converts to lithium hydroxide, so I do not think that material is still active.

 

You may also transfer that material using a heavy secondary containment across the campus and butyl lithium is not shock sensitive.

 

Thanks,

 

Tilak

 

 

From: DCHAS-L Discussion List =5Bmailto:dchas-l=40MED.CORNELL.EDU=5D On Behalf Of Ellen M Sweet
Sent: Wednesday, May 16, 2012 3:06 PM
To: DCHAS-L=40MED.CORNELL.EDU
Subject: =5BDCHAS-L=5D dry butyl lithium

 

Hi everyone,

I have a question that I'm surprised I cannot get an answer to through the normal channels.

We did a small lab cleanout this week and discovered a bottle of butyl lithium, 1.6M solution in hexanes. The hexane is completely dried up.

We've left it in the lab for now. But need to move it to our central waste storage site soon.

 

Is there a problem with transporting this material across campus?

 

Ellen Sweet

Hazardous Materials Coordinator

Cornell University Environmental Health and Safety

office: (607) 254-8644

cell: (315) 730-8896

 

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