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The following pictograms are associated with these hazard classes and categories. The flame pictogram is used for the following classes and categories: ï‚· Flammable gases (Category 1A and 1B Flammable gas; Category 1A and 1B Chemically unstable gas; Category 1A Pyrophoric gas) ) ï‚·...

The following pictograms are associated with these hazard classes and categories. The flame pictogram is used for the following classes and categories:  Flammable gases (Category 1A and 1B Flammable gas; Category 1A and 1B Chemically unstable gas; Category 1A Pyrophoric gas) )  Aerosols (Category 1 and 2)  Flammable liquids (Category 1, 2 and 3)  Flammable solids (Category 1 and 2)  Pyrophoric liquids (Category 1)  Pyrophoric solids (Category 1)  Self-heating substances and mixtures (Category 1 and 2)  Substances and mixtures which, in contact with water, emit flammable gases (Category 1, 2 and 3)  Self-reactive substances and mixtures (Types B*, C, D, E and F)  Organic peroxides (Types B*, C, D, E and F)  Chemicals under pressure (Category 1** and 2**) The flame over circle pictogram is used for the following classes and categories:  Oxidizing gases (Category 1)  Oxidizing liquids (Category 1, 2 and 3)  Oxidizing solids (Category 1, 2 and 3) The gas cylinder pictogram is used for the following classes and categories:  Gases under pressure (Compressed gas, Liquefied gas, Refrigerated liquefied gas, and Dissolved gas)  Chemicals under pressure (Category 1**, 2** and 3) The corrosion pictogram is used for the following classes and categories:  Corrosive to metals (Category 1)  Skin corrosion/irritation – Skin corrosion (Category 1, 1A, 1B and 1C)  Serious eye damage/eye irritation – Serious eye damage (Category 1) The exploding bomb pictogram is used for the following classes and categories:  Self-reactive substances and mixtures (Types A and B*)  Organic peroxides (Types A and B*) The skull and crossbones pictogram is used for the following classes and categories:  Acute toxicity – o Oral (Category 1, 2 and 3) o Dermal (Category 1, 2 and 3) o Inhalation (Category 1, 2 and 3) The health hazard pictogram is used for the following classes and categories:  Respiratory or skin sensitization – Respiratory sensitizer (Category 1, 1A and 1B)  Germ cell mutagenicity (Category 1, 1A, 1B and 2)  Carcinogenicity (Category 1, 1A, 1B, and 2)  Reproductive toxicity (Category 1, 1A, 1B and 2)  Specific Target Organ Toxicity – Single exposure (Category 1 and 2)  Specific Target Organ Toxicity – Repeated exposure (Category 1 and 2)  Aspiration hazard (Category 1) The exclamation mark pictogram is used for the following classes and categories:  Acute toxicity – Oral, Dermal, Inhalation (Category 4)  Skin corrosion/irritation – Skin irritation (Category 2)  Serious eye damage/eye irritation – Eye irritation (Category 2 and 2A)  Respiratory or skin sensitization – Skin sensitizer (Category 1, 1A and 1B)  Specific target organ toxicity – Single exposure (Category 3) The biohazardous infectious materials pictogram is used for the following classes and categories:  Biohazardous Infectious Materials (Category 1) * Both the Flame and Explosive pictograms are used for Self-reactive substances and mixtures (Type B) and Organic peroxides (Type B). ** Both the Flame and Cylinder pictograms are used for Chemicals under pressure, categories 1 and 2. NOTE: Physical Hazards Not Otherwise Classified and Health Hazards Not Otherwise Classified classes are required to have a GHS pictogram that is appropriate to the hazard identified.

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