Safety Practices
2-22
Waste Disposal
Contents of waste containers
The materials that you collect in waste containers may include small amounts of the substances
that were analyzed and other chemicals used in the analyses.
If these materials are toxic, corrosive, or contain organics, you may have to treat the collected
effluent as hazardous waste. Refer to your local safety regulations for proper disposal procedures.
NOTE: The responsible body is responsible for the correct collection and disposal of waste materials.
This includes the necessity for a suitably sized waste container of appropriately resistant material
for the collection of organic solvent waste and provision for the removal into an appropriate
exhaust system of any gases or vapors which may be produced in hazardous concentrations.
Disposing of defective lamps
Hollow cathode lamps and electrodeless discharge lamps contain small quantities of the lamp
element in a very pure form. If a lamp containing toxic elements becomes defective or otherwise
unusable, you must treat it as hazardous waste and dispose of it accordingly. A licensed company
in the chemical waste disposal business can provide lamp disposal in accordance with
environmental regulatory requirements. Please note that PerkinElmer does not take back lamps
for disposal.
In addition, hollow cathode lamps and deuterium lamps are maintained under reduced pressure.
Handle and dispose of them correctly to minimize the implosion risk.
For information, the quantities of analyte material contained in the cathodes of hollow cathode
lamps are listed in the table below:
Quantity of Material in
the Cathode
Single-Element Hollow
Cathode Lamps
Multi-Element Hollow
Cathode Lamps
less than 5 g
As, Au, B, Ba, Be, Ca, Dy, Er,
Eu, Ga, Gd, Ge, Hf, Ho, In, Ir,
K, La, Li, Mg, Na, Nd, Pd, Pr,
Pt. Re, Rh, Ru, Sc, Se, Sm, Sn,
Ta, Tb, Tm, Yb, Y
Na-K, Pt-Ru
5–10 g
Ag, Al, Bi, Cd, Co, Cr, Mn,
Mo, Ni, Sb, Si, Sr, Te, V, W,
Zn, Zr
Ca-Mg, Ca-Zn, Ag-Au,
Sn-Te, Ca-Mg-Zn, Ca-Mg-Al
10–15 g
Cu, Fe, Hg, Nb, P, Pb, Ti, Tl all other multi-element HCLs
For EDLs, the quantity of analyte material used is much less than the quantities used in HCLs.
Typically, only several milligrams of material are placed in the EDL bulb. No PerkinElmer EDLs
(System 1 or 2) contain more than 0.05 g of analyte material.
Summary of Contents for aanalyst 200
Page 1: ...AAnalyst 200 User s Guide ...
Page 6: ......
Page 7: ...Introduction 1 ...
Page 8: ......
Page 18: ...Introduction 1 12 ...
Page 19: ...Safety Practices 2 ...
Page 20: ......
Page 44: ...Safety Practices 2 26 ...
Page 45: ...Preparing Your Lab 3 ...
Page 46: ......
Page 66: ...Preparing Your Lab 3 22 ...
Page 67: ...System Description 4 ...
Page 68: ......
Page 89: ...Installation 5 ...
Page 90: ......
Page 115: ...Operation of the Instrument 6 ...
Page 116: ......
Page 132: ...Operation of the Instrument 6 18 Figure 6 9 Installing the lamp compartment cover ...
Page 158: ...Operation of the Instrument 6 44 ...
Page 159: ...Touch Screens 7 ...
Page 160: ......
Page 173: ...AAnalyst 200 User s Guide 7 15 Screen 7 10 Spectrometer Subpage Flame Technique ...
Page 210: ...Touch Screens 7 52 ...
Page 211: ...Analyzing Samples 8 ...
Page 212: ......
Page 220: ...Analyzing Samples 8 10 Screen 8 4 Display Calibration screen ...
Page 231: ...AAnalyst 200 User s Guide 8 21 The results are displayed and printed Screen 8 12 Analyze page ...
Page 244: ...Analyzing Samples 8 34 ...
Page 245: ...Maintenance 9 ...
Page 246: ......
Page 268: ...Maintenance 9 24 Figure 9 6 Removing the burner assembly from the instrument ...
Page 291: ...AAnalyst 200 User s Guide 9 47 Figure 9 15 Removing the E Box from the instrument ...
Page 293: ...AAnalyst 200 User s Guide 9 49 Figure 9 16 Replacing the E Box ...
Page 307: ...Troubleshooting 10 ...
Page 308: ......
Page 320: ...Troubleshooting 10 14 ...
Page 321: ...Index ...
Page 322: ......