DEPARTMENT OF
PHYSICS, OREGON STATE UNIVERSITY
LABORATORY SAFETY
These instructions apply to
research and teaching labs alike.
There are also general safety issues that relate to classroom
instruction. Accidents rarely
happen, but when they do, it is important that you are prepared. Review this information before your
first laboratory or recitation section:
- Emergency phone numbers:
The site http://oregonstate.edu/dept/security/emergency_info/emergency_numbers.php
has a list of emergency numbers that you can download to keep. Here is a partial list:
911
from campus telephones reaches Corvallis emergency.
737-7000:
Campus
emergencies or escort to car or dorm.
737-3010:
OSU
police at OSU
737-5000:
Saferide
program
766-6924:
Corvallis
Police
766-6857:
Benton
County Sheriff
737-xxxx are OSU campus numbers and
are reached by dialing 7-xxx from campus phones. Dial 9 before dialing non-campus local numbers (but not
before 911).
Make sure you can give directions
to the Physics department and to the particular lab you are in. Weniger Hall is located on Monroe
Avenue and SW Memorial Place. It
is the tallest building on Monroe and easily visible. The doors closest to most labs are the southeast exit to the
parking lot between Weniger Hall and Gilbert Hall, and the southwest exit to
the street (Memorial Place) between Weniger Hall and the Student Health Center.
- Locate exits and know evacuation routes in the event
of earthquake, fire alarm or power outage. In the event of such an emergency, immediately order
students to cease work, and leave the building without gathering
personal belongings.
- Do NOT leave laboratories unattended under any
circumstances while students are there. Accidents happen suddenly.
- No food or drink in the lab. This protects the equipment from
damage, and keeps the equipment and the room clean. Students can step outside to eat
or drink if they need to.
- Locate circuit breakers in each laboratory. Locate fire alarms in the
hallways.
- First Aid Kit in grad student mail room (WGR 385),
and in lab prep room (WGR 202) accessible from the labs WGR 200, 204, 234,
258. The Student Health Center is across from Weniger on the west side
(Plageman Hall).
- Astronomy labs sometimes involve viewing from the
Weniger roof. Pay particular
attention that students do not wander near the edge of the roof. There is a barrier, but they can
defeat it if they try. Always
have your roof key with you – the roof door locks behind you and you
need a key to enter and exit the roof. Never leave students unattended on the roof.
- Find out from the course instructor whether any labs
have particular safety hazards: high voltage or current, radioactivity,
chemicals, heat, lasers. Appropriate instructions should be given to the
students. Jim Ketter knows
everything about undergrad teaching labs - make sure you know who he is.
- Special regulations exist for labs in which ionizing
radiation is present. In
general, these labs have restricted access, and entry is allowed only
after a course from the Radiation Safety office, after which you are
issued a photo badge. No
undergraduate teaching labs involve such restrictions, but there is one PH314
lab involving low-level radioactive decay. The TA will be required to attend radiation training,
but the levels are so low that no badges are required.
- University
insurance does not cover injuries to unauthorized people in the lab - your
children, family and friends.
Show them around the lab, by all means, but make sure that no
unauthorized person is there without strict supervision.
- There are extensive documents
concerning all aspects of safety at the OSU Environmental and Health
Safety website.
http://oregonstate.edu/dept/ehs/index.html
A few that may be
particularly relevant are listed here:
OSU Chemical Hygiene Plan http://oregonstate.edu/dept/ehs/chyp/chyp.html
Section 1 - General Safety
Rules http://oregonstate.edu/dept/ehs/saferule/safrul1.html
Section 2 - Classroom Safety http://oregonstate.edu/dept/ehs/saferule/safrul2.html
Section 16 - Lab. Safety
Rules http://oregonstate.edu/dept/ehs/saferule/safrul16.html
- Personal
safety. As you travel to and
from a lab or recitation section, especially in the evening, be aware of
your surroundings and take all reasonable precautions that you would in
any city. Travel with someone
else if possible, park your car close to the building, and carry a cell
phone. Use the Saferide
program. Corvallis is a safe
community by national standards, but serious assaults on campus and in the
wider community have occurred.