Four categories of hazard are discussed - contamination of the drains
from an unexpected source, backflow or adverse flow in the drains
causing materials to be sent to the wrong place, overloading of the
drains from an unexpectedly high volume of liquid release or poor
design and the silting up and/or blocking of drains. many examples
including chemical reaction and contamination by flammable gas are
given.
%0 Journal Article
%1 Anon:1978b
%A Anonymous,
%D 1978
%J Loss Prevention Bulletin
%K imported
%P 10--23
%T Safety Down the Drain
%V 19
%X Four categories of hazard are discussed - contamination of the drains
from an unexpected source, backflow or adverse flow in the drains
causing materials to be sent to the wrong place, overloading of the
drains from an unexpectedly high volume of liquid release or poor
design and the silting up and/or blocking of drains. many examples
including chemical reaction and contamination by flammable gas are
given.
@article{Anon:1978b,
abstract = {Four categories of hazard are discussed - contamination of the drains
from an unexpected source, backflow or adverse flow in the drains
causing materials to be sent to the wrong place, overloading of the
drains from an unexpectedly high volume of liquid release or poor
design and the silting up and/or blocking of drains. many examples
including chemical reaction and contamination by flammable gas are
given.},
added-at = {2010-01-05T23:12:10.000+0100},
author = {Anonymous},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2631a7a5165c89257ce7d0a71523d9d1d/sjp},
interhash = {ef251f6dc08059d45b3627977ff3c3a1},
intrahash = {631a7a5165c89257ce7d0a71523d9d1d},
journal = {Loss Prevention Bulletin},
keywords = {imported},
pages = {10--23},
timestamp = {2010-01-19T17:39:44.000+0100},
title = {Safety Down the Drain},
volume = 19,
year = 1978
}