Generally, flush the eye with water for a period of time (like ten minutes). It depends on what chemical it is. Some require rinsing with water, some require an emergency room trip after a good flushing with water. Consult the label in the chemical packaging.
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if you get chemeicals in your eye go to the sink and wash your eye out with warm water for atleast 5 minutes if that doesnt work go to the hospital emergency room quickly i learned to do this at school im 10 years old but i am sure that this will work.
typically, there should be an eyewash station in the lab or a small bottle that sprays a liquid designed to clean out any chemicals in your eye. :)
... if you do not find either of these in your lab, it is technically not up to safety conduct and must be reported.
if chemical splashes into your eyes in the lab you should immediately rinse it out in the emergency eyewash fountain,sittuated at the back or side of the lab
Most labs have an eyewash station you should use. If it doesn't, flush your eye with water immediately.
Depends on the chemical, but just try and flush water in your eye and call a doctor.Try not to touch it too much..
simply i will rinse it with water or get my eyes and cleaned it
- Wash abundantly with warm water your eyes as soon as possible. - Go to an ophthalmologist.
In almost all cases, you will do no harm by flushing the eyes with sterile water, distilled water, normal saline or, failing that, whatever clean water is available. Very few chemical agents react with water. Further treatment depends on which agent it is. If the specific agent is not known, standard NBC exposure precautions and reactions should be followed.
Yes because when a chemical change happens the substance may not have some of the physical or chemical properties it had once before. An example of htis would be Dry Ice. This would be an example because dry ice was once just ice then they add a chemical and it turns into dry ice.
reactants