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Industrial Degreasing - Getting the Right Degreaser to Fit Your Needs

By: L.Steven Sanders

Whether your company needs to replace a classic degreaser or is shopping for its very first degreaser, there are several things to consider before investing in a large stock of degreaser. As opposed to domestic grade degreasing, industrial degreasing takes a thorough inspection of how a specific degreaser will impact a businesses financial situation, the healthiness of its workers, and its position toward the environment. To this end, we need to talk about some essential considerations to determine before purchasing an industrial degreaser or other industrial cleaners.

Cleaning Power

The first step in choosing the best degreaser would be to identify the kind of cleaning strength you need. For example, trichlorothylene is best for stripping semicured varnish or paint films, heavy rosins, and buffing compounds; perchloroethylene is best for removing high-melt waxes and cleaning light-gauge metal parts; and methylene chloride is best for degreasing thermal switches along with other temperature responsive devices. While these along with other chlorinated solvents aren't eco-friendly, finding a conventional solvent that fits your needs and then figuring out its environmentally desired replacement is a good way to arrive at an eco friendly solution.

Hazardous Air Pollutants

Hazardous Air Pollutants (HAPs) emit from toxic solutions and endanger the health of people who inhale them, which is everyone who works in the vicinity of their emission. The short-term effects of HAP exposure include breathing distress, dizziness, and stomach sickness, and the long-term effects can be as severe as infertility, nerve damage, and cancer. For businesses, HAPs pose two corollary risks: long-term illness in workers, and thus, lawsuits that ruin a company's finances and name. Because HAPs also affect the environment, a substantial list of HAPs are available at the EPA's website.

Volatile Organic Compounds

Degreasers that contain Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs) won't harm environmental surroundings. However they can damage workers just like degreasers that contain HAPs. Since environmentally recommended and environmentally safe cleaners typically contain VOCs, always be sure to assess the containment of VOCs within an "eco friendly" degreaser.

Flashpoint

A solution's flashpoint will be the point at which it catches fires. For many industrial degreasing applications, a low flashpoint is of very little concern. However for some others, particularly vapor degreasing and dielectric degreasing, a higher flash point or no flashpoint is imperative. In general, the larger a degreaser's flashpoint is, the better.

Biodegradability

Purchasing a biodegradable degreaser delivers two benefits: it's not going to damage environmental surroundings, and it will lower your chemical waste disposal bill. Citrus-based VORTEX, which removes grease, oil, tar, asphalt, and bitumen as well as its toxic counterparts, is definitely an example of a biodegradable degreaser intended for general use.

Whether your company needs to replace a classic degreaser or is shopping for its very first degreaser, there are several things to consider before investing in a large stock of degreaser.

About Author
In my research on industrial cleaners, I've studied the perfect traits of degreasers & found some great information about organic degreasers at www.ecolink.com.

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