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MSDS Material Safety Data Sheet
CAS

7439-89-6
7439-96-5
1344-28-1
1317-65-3
9004-34-6
12001-26-2
14808-60-7
69012-64-2
7440-21-3
13463-67-7
7789-75-5
7440-47-3
7440-02-0
7439-98-7
546-93-0

File Name: airgas_com---415884.asp
                                                                                                                                                      MSDS NO: SEBU
REVISED: APR 2002
SE1456

MATERIAL SAFETY DATA SHEET
For U.S. Manufactured or Distributed Welding Consumables and Related Products. May be used to comply with OSHA's Hazard Communication Standard, 29 CFR 1910. 1200
and Superfund Amendments and Reauthorization Act (SARA) of 1986 Public Law 99-499. Standard must be consulted for specific requirements.
SECTION 1 - IDENTIFICATION
Manufacturer/Supplier Name: ITW HOBART BROTHERS | Telephone No: (937) 332-4000
Address: 400 TRADE SQUARE EAST, TROY, OH 45373 |Emergency No: (800) 424-9300
Trade Name For: "GROUP A": E6010, E6011, E6012, E6013, E6022, E7014, E7024-1
Trade Name For: "GROUP B": E7018, E7018-1, E7018M
Trade Name For: "GROUP C": E7010-P1, E7018-A1, E7018-G, E8010-P1, E8018-B2, E8018-B2L, E8018-B6, E8018-B8, E8018-C1, E8018-C2,
E8018-C3, E8018-G, E9010-P1, E9015-B9, E9018-B3, E9018-B3L, E9018-M, E10018-D2, E10018-M, E11018-M, E12018-M
Product Type For: "GROUP A" SHIELDED METAL ARC WELDING (SMAW) CARBON STEEL
Product Type For: "GROUP B" SHIELDED METAL ARC WELDING (SMAW) LOW HYDROGEN CARBON STEEL
Product Type For: "GROUP C" SHIELDED METAL ARC WELDING (SMAW) LOW HYDROGEN, LOW ALLOY STEEL
SECTION 2 - HAZARDOUS INGREDIENTS - IMPORTANT
This section covers the hazardous materials from which this product is manufactured. The fumes and gases produced during welding with normal use of this product are also
addressed in Section 5. The term "hazardous" in this section should be interpreted as a term required and defined in OSHA Hazard Communication Standard (29 CFR Part
1910.1200).
% WEIGHT EXPOSURE LIMIT (mg/m3)
HAZARDOUS INGREDIENTS Group A Group B Group C CAS NO. OSHA PEL ACGIH TLV
IRON+ 70-90 60-80 60-90 7439-89-6 5 R* 3 R*
10 (Oxide Fume) 5 (Oxide Fume) {A4}
0.2 鈾︹櫐
#MANGANESE 1-5 1-5 1-5 7439-96-5 5 CL** (Dust)
1, 3 STEL*** (Fume) (Dust & Fume)
##ALUMINUM OXIDE <5 --- --- 1344-28-1 5 R* 10 {A4}
CALCIUM CARBONATE --- 3-10 5-10 1317-65-3 5 R* 10
5 (as CaO) 2 (as CaO)
CELLULOSE <5 <2 --- 9004-34-6 5 R* 10
MICA <5 --- --- 12001-26-2 3 R* 3 R*
SILICA++ <5 <5 <5 14808-60-7 0.1 R* 0.1 R*
(Amorphous Silica Fume) 69012-64-2 0.8 2 R*
SILICON --- <2 <5 7440-21-3 5 R* 10
TITANIUM DIOXIDE <10 <10 <5 13463-67-7 5 R* 10 {A4}
FLUORSPAR --- 1-12 5-15 7789-75-5 2.5 (as F) 2.5 (as F) {A4}
#CHROMIUM (1) --- --- <9 7440-47-3 1 (Metal) 0.5 (Metal) {A4}
0.5 (Cr II & Cr III Compounds) 0.5 (Cr III Compounds) {A4}
0.1 CL** (Cr VI Compounds) 0.05 (Cr VI Soluble Compounds) {A1}
#NICKEL (2) --- --- <5 7440-02-0 1 (Metal) 1.5 (Metal) {A5}
1 (Soluble Compounds) 0.1 (Soluble Compounds) {A4}
1 (Insoluble Compounds) 0.2 (Insoluble Compounds) {A1}
MOLYBDENUM (2) 0.1-1 7439-98-7 5 R* 0.5 R*(Soluble Compounds){A3}鈾?
10 I* (Elemental/Metal and Insoluble)
3 R* (Elemental/Metal and Insoluble)
MAGNESIUM CARBONATE <2 <5 --- 546-93-0 5 R* 10
SILICATE BINDERS <10 <10 <10 --------- Not Established Not Established
(1) Group C - Not present in E7018-A1; E8018-C1 and C2; and E10018-D2.
(2) Group C - Not present in E7018-A1; E8018-B2, B2L; E9018-B3, B3L; and E10018-D2.
R* - Respirable Fraction. I* - Inhalable Fraction. ** - Ceiling Limit. *** - Short Term Exposure Limit.
{A1} - Confirmed Human Carcinogen per ACGIH. {A3} - Confirmed Animal Carcinogen with Unknown Relevance to Humans per ACGIH.
{A4} - Not Classifiable as a Human Carcinogen per ACGIH. {A5} - Not Suspected as a Human Carcinogen per ACGIH.
+ - As a nuisance particulate covered under "Particulates Not Otherwise Regulated" by OSHA or "Particulates Not Otherwise Classified" by ACGIH.
++ - Crystalline silica is bound within the product as it exists in the package. However, research indicates silica is present in welding fume in the amorphous
(noncrystalline) form. # - Reportable material under Section 313 of SARA. ## - Reportable material under Section 313 of SARA only in fibrous form.
鈾? - 2002 ACGIH listed under Notice of Intended Changes. A2 - "Suspected Human Carcinogen ".
鈾︹櫐 - 2002 ACGIH listed under Notice of Intended Changes. Limits of 0.03 mg/m3 (respirable fraction) are proposed and should be considered as trial limits.
The exposure limit for welding fume has been established at 5 mg/m3 with OSHA's PEL and ACGIH's TLV. The individual complex compounds within the fume
may have lower exposure limits than the general welding fume PEL/TLV. An Industrial Hygienist, the OSHA Permissible Exposure Limits For Air Contaminants (29
CFR 1910.1000), and the ACGIH Threshold Limit Values should be consulted to determine the specific fume constituents present and their respective exposure limits.
SECTION 3 - PHYSICAL/CHEMICAL CHARACTERISTICS
Welding consumables applicable to this sheet are solid and nonvolatile as shipped.
SECTION 4 - FIRE AND EXPLOSION HAZARD DATA
Welding consumables applicable to this sheet as shipped are nonreactive, nonflammable, nonexplosive and essentially nonhazardous until welded. Welding arcs and sparks can
ignite combustibles and flammable products. See American National Standard Z49.1 referenced in Section 7.
SECTION 5 - REACTIVITY DATA
HAZARDOUS DECOMPOSITION PRODUCTS
Welding fumes and gases cannot be classified simply. The composition and quantity of both are dependent upon the metal being welded, the process, procedures and
electrodes used. Most fume ingredients are present as complex oxides and compounds and not as pure metals.
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 or galvanizing), the number of welders and the volume of the work area, the quality and amount of ventilation, the position of the welder's head with respect
to the fume plume, as well as the presence of contaminants in the atmosphere (such as chlorinated hydrocarbon vapors from cleaning and degreasing activities).
When the electrode is consumed, the fume and gas decomposition products generated are different in percent and form from the ingredients listed in Section 2. Decomposition
products of normal operation include those originating from the volatilization, reaction or oxidation of the materials shown in Section 2, plus those from the base metal and
coating, etc., as noted above.
Reasonably expected constituents of the fume would include: Primarily - complex iron oxides and fluorides. Secondarily - complex oxides of calcium, manganese,
aluminum, chromium, nickel, silicon, molybdenum, magnesium, and titanium.
Monitor for the materials identified in Section 2. Fumes from the use of this product may contain fluorides, manganese, calcium oxide, chromium and nickel
compounds, mica and amorphous silica fume whose exposure limits are lower than the 5 mg/m3 PEL/TLV for general welding fume.

415884 Page 1 of 2
ITW HOBART BROTHERS
Gaseous reaction products may 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 inside the welder's helmet if worn
or in the worker's breathing zone. [See ANSI/AWS F1.1, available from the "American Welding Society ", P.O. Box 351040, Miami, FL 33135. Also, from AWS is F1.3
"Evaluating Contaminants in the Welding Environment - A Sampling Strategy Guide", which gives additional advice on sampling.]
SECTION 6 - HEALTH HAZARD DATA
EFFECTS OF OVEREXPOSURE:
Electric arc welding may create one or more of the following health hazards:
ARC RAYS can injure eyes and burn skin. ELECTRIC SHOCK can kill. See Section 7.
FUMES AND GASES can be dangerous to your health. PRIMARY ROUTES OF ENTRY are the respiratory system, eyes and/or skin.
SHORT-TERM (ACUTE) OVEREXPOSURE EFFECTS:
WELDING FUMES - May result in discomfort such as dizziness, nausea or dryness or irritation of nose, throat or eyes.
IRON, IRON OXIDE - None are known. Treat as nuisance dust or fume.
MANGANESE - Metal fume fever characterized by chills, fever, upset stomach, vomiting, irritation of the throat and aching of body. Recovery is generally complete within 48
hours of the overexposure.
ALUMINUM OXIDE - Irritation of the respiratory system.
CALCIUM OXIDE - Dust or fumes may cause irritation of the respiratory system, skin and eyes.
MICA - Dust may cause irritation of the respiratory system, skin and eyes.
SILICA (AMORPHOUS) - Dust and fumes may cause irritation of the respiratory system, skin and eyes.
TITANIUM DIOXIDE - Irritation of respiratory system.
FLUORIDES - Fluoride compounds evolved may cause skin and eye burns, pulmonary edema and bronchitis.
CHROMIUM - Inhalation of fume with chromium (VI) compounds can cause irritation of the respiratory tract, lung damage and asthma-like symptoms. Swallowing chromium
(VI) salts can cause severe injury or death. Dust on skin can form ulcers. Eyes may be burned by chromium (VI) compounds. Allergic reactions may occur in some people.
NICKEL, NICKEL COMPOUNDS - Metallic taste, nausea, tightness in chest, metal fume fever, allergic reaction.
MOLYBDENUM - Irritation of the eyes, nose and throat.
MAGNESIUM, MAGNESIUM OXIDE - Overexposure to the oxide may cause metal fume fever characterized by metallic taste, tightness of chest and fever. Symptoms may last
24 to 48 hours following overexposure.
LONG-TERM (CHRONIC) OVEREXPOSURE EFFECTS:
WELDING FUMES - Excess levels may cause bronchial asthma, lung fibrosis, pneumoconiosis or "siderosis."
IRON, IRON OXIDE FUMES - Can cause siderosis (deposits of iron in lungs) which some researchers believe may affect pulmonary function. Lungs will clear in time when
exposure to iron and its compounds ceases. Iron and magnetite (Fe3O4) are not regarded as fibrogenic materials.
MANGANESE - Long-term overexposure to manganese compounds may affect the central nervous system. Symptoms may be similar to Parkinson's disease and can include
slowness, changes in handwriting, gait impairment, muscle spasms and cramps and less commonly, tremor and behavioral changes. Employees who are overexposed to
manganese compounds should be seen by a physician for early detection of neurologic problems.
ALUMINUM OXIDE - Pulmonary fibrosis and emphysema.
CALCIUM OXIDE - Prolonged overexposure may cause ulceration of the skin and perforation of the nasal septum, dermatitis and pneumonia.
MICA - Prolonged overexposure may cause scarring of the lungs and pneumoconiosis characterized by cough, shortness of breath, weakness and weight loss.
SILICA (AMORPHOUS) - Research indicates that silica is present in welding fume in the amorphous form. Long term overexposure may cause pneumoconiosis. Noncrystalline
forms of silica (amorphous silica) are considered to have little fibrotic potential.
TITANIUM DIOXIDE - Pulmonary irritation and slight fibrosis.
FLUORIDES - Serious bone erosion (Osteoporosis) and mottling of teeth.
CHROMIUM - Ulceration and perforation of nasal septum. Respiratory irritation may occur with symptoms resembling asthma. Studies have shown that chromate production
workers exposed to hexavalent chromium compounds have an excess of lung cancers. Chromium (VI) compounds are more readily absorbed through the skin than chromium (III)
compounds. Good practice requires the reduction of employee exposure to chromium (III) and (VI) compounds.
NICKEL, NICKEL COMPOUNDS - Lung fibrosis or pneumoconiosis. Studies of nickel refinery workers indicated a higher incidence of lung and nasal cancers.
MOLYBDENUM - Prolonged overexposure may result in loss of appetite, weight loss, loss of muscle coordination, difficulty in breathing and anemia.
MAGNESIUM, MAGNESIUM OXIDE - No adverse long term health effects have been reported in the literature.
MEDICAL CONDITIONS AGGRAVATED BY EXPOSURE: Persons with pre-existing impaired lung functions (asthma-like conditions).
EMERGENCY AND FIRST AID PROCEDURES: Call for medical aid. Employ first aid techniques recommended by the American Red Cross.
Eyes & Skin: If irritation or flash burns develop after exposure, consult a physician.
CARCINOGENICITY:
Chromium VI and nickel compounds must be considered as carcinogens under OSHA (29 CFR 1910.1200). Chromium VI compounds are classified as IARC Group 1 and NTP
Group 1 carcinogens. Nickel compounds are classified as IARC Group 1 and NTP Group 2 carcinogens. Welding fumes must be considered as possible carcinogens under OSHA
(29 CFR 1910.1200).
CALIFORNIA PROPOSITION 65:
For Group B and C products: WARNING: This product contains or produces a chemical known to the State of California to cause cancer and birth defects (or other reproductive
harm). (California Health & Safety Code Section 25249.5 et seq.)
For Group A products: WARNING: This product, when used for welding or cutting, produces fumes or gases which contain chemicals known to the State of California to cause
birth defects and, in some cases, cancer. (California Health & Safety Code Section 25249.5 et seq.)
SECTION 7 - PRECAUTIONS FOR SAFE HANDLING & USE/APPLICABLE CONTROL MEASURES
Read and understand the manufacturer's instructions and the precautionary label on the product. See American National Standard Z49.1; Safety in Welding and Cutting published
by the American Welding Society, P.O. Box 351040, Miami, FL 33135 and OSHA Publication 2206 (29 CFR 1910), U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, DC 20402 for
more detail on any of the following.
VENTILATION: Use enough ventilation, local exhaust at the arc or both to keep the fumes and gases below PEL/TLVs in the worker's breathing zone and the general area.
Train the welder to keep his head out of the fumes.
RESPIRATORY PROTECTION: Use NIOSH approved or equivalent fume respirator or air supplied respirator when welding in confined space or where local exhaust or
ventilation does not keep exposure below PEL/TLVs.
EYE PROTECTION: Wear helmet or use face shield with filter lens. As a rule of thumb begin with Shade Number 14. Adjust if needed by selecting the next lighter and/or
darker shade number. Provide protective screens and flash goggles, if necessary, to shield others.
PROTECTIVE CLOTHING: Wear hand, head and body protection which help to prevent injury from radiation, sparks and electrical shock. See ANSI Z49.1. At a
minimum this includes welder's gloves and a protective face shield, and may include arm protectors, aprons, hats, shoulder protection as well as dark nonsynthetic clothing. Train
the welder not to touch live electrical parts and to insulate himself from work and ground.
PROCEDURE FOR CLEANUP OF SPILLS OR LEAKS: Not applicable
WASTE DISPOSAL: Prevent waste from contaminating surrounding environment. Discard any product, residue, disposable container or liner in an environmentally
acceptable manner, in full compliance with Federal, State and Local regulations.
SPECIAL PRECAUTIONS (IMPORTANT): Maintain exposure below the PEL/TLVs. Use industrial hygiene monitoring to ensure that your use of this material does not
create exposures which exceed PEL/TLVs. Always use exhaust ventilation. Refer to the following sources for important additional information: ANSI Z49.1 from the American
Welding Society, P.O. Box 351040, Miami, FL 33135 and OSHA (29 CFR 1910) from the U.S. Department of Labor, Washington, DC 20210.
ITW Hobart Brothers believes this data to be accurate and to reflect qualified expert opinion regarding current research. However, ITW Hobart Brothers cannot make
any expressed or implied warranty as to this information.
415884 Page 2 of 2

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