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Denise should put the herb samples in the lab's waste container.
make sure you have gloves on, and before you dispose the solid, tell your instructor because they might want to use it for something else. If you are to dispose it, then make sure you put it into the right waste container, and make sure that their are no hazardous chemical on the solid so it doesnt make a reaction when you put it in the waste container.
The best way, if possible, is not to create it or at least minimize its creation. This is followed by recycling all waste that you do create. Next would be the biodegrading of the waste (by composting or anaerobic digestion). Ultimately there is some waste that cannot be handled in any of these fashions. That can be incinerated to recover its heating value. Ash from incineration or inert waste can be used as construction material in concrete. Wastes which are toxic or radioactive can be buried in secure landfill sites.
That is correct. Chemicals in their original container have a known purity, but there is always the chance that the temporary container you used was contaminated without your knowledge. If you put the material back that contamination then contaminates the entire container.
in a box or a container?
Denise should put the herb samples in the lab's waste container.
Yes, whenever you are traveling with a turtle, you should put it in a container that contains water.
The longer the half-life of radioactive waste, the more consideration will have to be given to the design and construction of the container in which it is stored. This as well as where the container itself is stored. If we look at spent fuel from nuclear reactors, this highly radioactive and extremely long-lived radioactive waste will have to have a most substantial container. The storage container will have to last for many hundreds of years. Low level radioactive waste can be put up in less substantial containers and simply buried in an approved manner at an approved facility.
Every medical department/nursing station/med room has a "sharps container". Needs should NOT be recapped. The needle, needle end first, should be dropped into the sharps container. When full, the biomedical waste department will pick it up to incinerate it.
Put the maleic anhydride into the appropriately marked hazardous waste container.
It is a container with a lid, that is used to put rubbish into. Other words for it are Dustbin, waste bin, ash can and garbage can.
To store sugar, you have to put it in a container.
The longer the half-life of radioactive waste, the more consideration will have to be given to the design and construction of the container in which it is stored. This as well as where the container itself is stored. If we look at spent fuel from nuclear reactors, this highly radioactive and extremely long-lived radioactive waste will have to have a most substantial container. The storage container will have to last for many hundreds of years. Low level radioactive waste can be put up in less substantial containers and simply buried in an approved manner at an approved facility.
make sure you have gloves on, and before you dispose the solid, tell your instructor because they might want to use it for something else. If you are to dispose it, then make sure you put it into the right waste container, and make sure that their are no hazardous chemical on the solid so it doesnt make a reaction when you put it in the waste container.
No. Just put in an air tight container.
nothing but broken glass
There should be a container you pour it into in the engine bay.